I think you should be aware of this updated research which places Russia in 187 th position out of 196 countries rated in terms of " riskiest locations for investors". A horrific assessment .
The point is not whether there is some fault or bias in the research or whether the research wrongly gave Russia's position because it should be a few places higher .No . The point is , why is Russia not in the top twenty countries , say , and why is the trend getting worse and not better ?
It is matters like the Khordokovsky case and the absurd invasion of Georgia --- plus many other shocking incidents -- that together make the case against Russia look so bad .
Russians often seem to be proud of their little tyrant and imagine that the rest of the world regards him as a strong man and a defender of his countries' assumed rights .
In fact , this is nowhere near the truth . He is seen as a school boy bully whom others only deal with when it is necessary or when it is forced on them . He is not respected in a positive way . Rather he is labelled unstable and erratic because of a bad temper and a person to watch from a distance only. In fact , a complete Ass in terms of international diplomacy and leadership .
And it is very high publicity incidents like the MK trial that simply reinforce the labels , whatever the actual truth may be .
Russia among 'world's riskiest' locations for investors, Maplecroft says
Publication time: 14 January 2011, 15:57
Russia is "one of the world's riskiest locations for business to invest in," according to a survey of 196 nations by U.K risk-assessment company Maplecroft.
Russia is the 10th-riskiest country for investors, sliding from 15th last year to place between Pakistan and the Central African Republic, Maplecroft's annual Political Risk Atlas released on Thursday. Brazil, India and China, which along with Russia make up the so-called BRIC group of leading emerging-market economies, are ranked 94th, 26th and 62nd, respectively.
Maplecroft, which assesses factors including conflict, terrorism, the rule of law and the regulatory and business environment, rates 11 countries including Russia as an "extreme risk" for investors.
In March, twin Martyr bombers killed 40 people in attacks on downtown Moscow subway stations, including one near the headquarters of the successor to the Soviet-era KGB. The bombings by Caucasian Mujahideen, were the most deadly in Moscow since similar attacks in 2004.
Apart from the heightened threat of Jihad, Russia's "poor performance is compounded by its ‘extreme risk' ratings for its business environment, corporate governance and the endemic nature of corruption, which is prevalent throughout all tiers of government," Bath, England-based Maplecroft said.
‘Politicized' Khodorkovsky Trial
While terrorist Russian leader Medvedev vowed to combat corruption when he came to power in 2008, Russians surveyed at the end of July ranked former president and now terrorist Putin's inability to deal with the issue during his 10 years in power as the administration's biggest failure.
Russia is the world's most corrupt major economy, according to Transparency International's 2010 Corruption Perceptions Index issued in October, sliding to the 154th spot of 178 countries and placing it alongside Tajikistan and Kenya.
The "politicized case" against Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the jailed former head of Yukos Oil Co., who last month was sentenced to another six years beyond his 8-year prison term for fraud, reflects the lack of judicial independence in Russia, the Maplecroft report said.
Khodorkovsky's new conviction on money laundering and embezzling oil may have "unintended repercussions" for business in Russia, state-controlled VTB Capital said Dec. 31.
The "most disturbing detail" was the court's rationale for the verdict, VTB said. Charges based on Yukos's use of internal transfer pricing, which redistributes cash flows among units of a holding company, creates a precedent that leaves other businesses open "to attack."
U.S. and European government officials criticized the conviction of Khodorkovsky and his former business partner Platon Lebedev, saying it weakened the rule of law in Russia and would harm Russia's image among investors.