Yevgeny Minchenko, a political scientist, suggested in a recent report that Russia was today run by an informal group of senior officials, security men and business people. He called this, using Soviet-era imagery, “politburo 2.0. One member was Igor Sechin, Rosneft’s chief executive. Among politburo “candidate members were Mr Abramovich and Mr Usmanov – plus Messrs Potanin, Deripaska and Fridman. Mr Putin was “arbiter and moderator. All this can make Russia a bewildering environment for foreign companies to navigate. But it also raises questions about the stability of a business system where so much depends on the say-so of one man – especially one whose grip on power in the past few months has seemed a little weaker than it once was.
尼尔·巴克利(Neil Buckley)是英国《金融时报》东欧版主编
Neil Buckley is the FT’s Eastern Europe editor
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