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Colours of a revolution. Post-communist society,global capitalism and the Ukraine crisis
Authors:Ruslan Dzarasov  Victoria Gritsenko
Affiliation:1. Research Center Economic Theory, Plekhanov Russian University of Economics, Moscow, Russia;2. Macroeconomics, Central Economics and Mathematics Institute of Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia;3. dzarasovr@gmail.com;5. Plekhanov Russian University of Economics, Moscow, Russia
Abstract:Abstract

The Ukraine crisis is usually treated either as Russia’s return to the old-style empire-building (the right) or as a clash of two imperialisms (the left). However, the essence of this crisis can be understood only from the dual perspective of the consequences of the Stalinist degeneration of the Russian Revolution and the fate of the modern global capitalism. The most rotten sections of the Soviet bureaucracy moved the society to capitalism. However, this effort could secure only a peripheral (Ukraine) or at best semi-peripheral (Russia) position in the capitalist world-system as a provider of cheap raw materials. Meanwhile, modern capitalism led to world economic crisis. In these conditions, the capital of the core capitalist countries obviously decided to strengthen its control over the periphery, and Russia’s aspirations to secure its domination over the former Soviet space were in the way. To thwart them, Western powers decided to provoke a Ukraine crisis, exploiting Ukrainians’ justified indignation at the backwardness and corruption inherent in their own peripheral capitalism. Hence, a study of the properties of the post-Soviet societies and their place in the world hierarchy is the key to understanding the Ukraine crisis.
Keywords:Ukraine  Russian Revolution  post-communist society  global capitalism
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