1st Edition

The Piratization of Russia Russian Reform Goes Awry

By Marshall I. Goldman Copyright 2003
300 Pages
by Routledge

304 Pages
by Routledge

304 Pages
by Routledge

In 1991, a small group of Russians emerged from the collapse of the Soviet Union and enjoyed one of the greatest transfers of wealth ever seen, claiming ownership of some of the most valuable petroleum, natural gas and metal deposits in the world. By 1997, five of those individuals were on Forbes Magazine's list of the world's richest billionaires. These self-styled oligarchs were accused of... Read more

1. Russia's Financial Bucaneers: The Wild and Wooly East

2. Setting the Stage: The Russian Economy in the Post-Communist Era

3. The Legacy of the Czarist Era: Untenable and Unsavory Roots

4. It's Broke, So Fix It: The Stalinist and Gorbachev Legacies

5. Privatization: Good Intentions but the Wrong Advice at the Wrong Time

6. The Nomenklatura Oligarchs

7. The Upstart Oligarchs

8. FIMACO: The Russian Central Bank and Money Laundering at the Highest

9. Corruption, Crime and the Russian Mafia

10. Who Says There Was No Better Way?

11. Confidence or Con Game: What Will it Take?

Biography

Marshall I. Goldman is Davis Professor of Russian Economics, Emeritus at Wellsley College and Associate Director of the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies, Harvard, USA.

'A tale of the making of rich oligarchs in the wake of the collapse of the Soviet Union and of the mafia’s role in these reforms.' - The Independent Review

'A clear, freewheeling [account of] ...the insider-dominated transfer of public property to a small number of "oligarchs."' - Foreign Affairs

'A testament to his longtime argument that Russia could have -- and should have -- done more to see to it that ordinary people were not left behind by the hastily envisioned new market economy.' - Moscow Times