Why Russia — a country with less money than Canada and fewer people than Nigeria — runs the world now (2024)

Arround the globe over the past few years Russia has persistently outmaneuvered countries with more people, more guns and more money

Get the latest from Tristin Hopper straight to your inbox

Author of the article:

Tristin Hopper

Published Jan 16, 2017Last updated Jan 17, 20176 minute read

Join the conversation
Why Russia — a country with less money than Canada and fewer people than Nigeria — runs the world now (1)

Russia makes less money per year than Canada. For 2016, its $1.3 trillion GDP was roughly on par with Australia, a country with one-sixth the population and less than half the square footage.

The country’s 147 million population isn’t all that impressive either; Nigeria, Bangladesh and Brazil all have more citizens.

And yet, between hacking the U.S. election and intervening in Syria, Russia is utterly dominating foreign affairs.

Advertisem*nt 2

Story continues below

This advertisem*nt has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.

Why Russia — a country with less money than Canada and fewer people than Nigeria — runs the world now (2)

THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS

Enjoy the latest local, national and international news.

  • Exclusive articles by Conrad Black, Barbara Kay, Rex Murphy and others. Plus, special edition NP Platformed and First Reading newsletters and virtual events.
  • Unlimited online access to National Post and 15 news sites with one account.
  • National Post ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition to view on any device, share and comment on.
  • Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword.
  • Support local journalism.

SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE ARTICLES

Enjoy the latest local, national and international news.

  • Exclusive articles by Conrad Black, Barbara Kay, Rex Murphy and others. Plus, special edition NP Platformed and First Reading newsletters and virtual events.
  • Unlimited online access to National Post and 15 news sites with one account.
  • National Post ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition to view on any device, share and comment on.
  • Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword.
  • Support local journalism.

REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES

Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience.

  • Access articles from across Canada with one account.
  • Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments.
  • Enjoy additional articles per month.
  • Get email updates from your favourite authors.

Don't have an account? Create Account

or

View more offers

Article content

Article content

With this in mind, the National Post contacted historians, political scientists and diplomats with a single question: Why is a Eurasian economic basketcase running the world now?

Being large “enough

Why Russia — a country with less money than Canada and fewer people than Nigeria — runs the world now (3)

Sometimes a derringer is just as effective as a smart bomb. Russia’s military spending is only one tenth that of the United States, it has fewer military personnel than India, and the smoke-billowing flagship of the Russian navy has to be followed everywhere by a tug in case it breaks down. And yet, this all seems to be plenty for a country that is very good at commanding global influence on the cheap. Crimea was seized without firing a shot. The Syria intervention required only about 50 aircraft and cost only $500 million — exactly the same amount the U.S. spent on training Syrian rebels. With Russia, it may not be so much the size of the army, but the fact that they’re demonstrably willing to use it. The country has sent its armed forces into battle no less than five times since the year 2000: In Chechnya, in the Caucasus border areas, Georgia, Ukraine’s Donbass region and, of course, in Syria.

Why Russia — a country with less money than Canada and fewer people than Nigeria — runs the world now (4)

NP Posted

Get a dash of perspective along with the trending news of the day in a very readable format.

By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc.

Article content

Advertisem*nt 3

Story continues below

This advertisem*nt has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.

Article content

Why Russia — a country with less money than Canada and fewer people than Nigeria — runs the world now (5)

Trust no one
Russia, much like Israel, is never entirely sure who it can trust as an ally. The old members of the Warsaw Pact took off almost as soon as the Berlin Wall was down. Ditto with many of the former Soviet republics, three of whom are now NATO countries directly abutting Russia’s border. Russia also has a jihadist problem in the Caucasus and a vast, empty resource-rich region sharing a largely undefended border with an expansionist China. The implication is that Russia’s aggressive approach to foreign affairs is partly a product of its neighbourhood. If Canada had to share the 49th parallel with North Korea, Azerbaijan and half a dozen other countries of dubious intentions and stability, it might also be a bit less polite.

Security council veto

Why Russia — a country with less money than Canada and fewer people than Nigeria — runs the world now (6)

Russia inherited the Soviet Union’s UN Security Council veto, which it earned through victory in the Second World War. What’s more, Russia uses it. Since 2000, Russia has used its veto power on 13 Security Council resolutions — mostly in regards to the Middle East. France and the U.K., by contrast, haven’t touched their vetoes since 1989. A veto-happy Russia naturally makes it hard to discuss global crises without inviting them to the table.

Advertisem*nt 4

Story continues below

This advertisem*nt has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.

Article content

They’re an easy villain

Why Russia — a country with less money than Canada and fewer people than Nigeria — runs the world now (7)

Here’s a headline from the U.K. tabloids, “Russia may organise migrant sex attacks in Europe to make Angela Merkel lose German elections.” It’s a ridiculous story, but the point is that British readers can apparently imagine that the Kremlin is capable of parachuting armies of sex offenders into Western Europe. Critics say that while Russia is no saint, the country gets a disproportionate share of Western condemnation simply because it’s so easy to score political points by taking shots at a former Cold War enemy. “Yes (Vladimir Putin) is authoritiarian, yes he uses extralegal methods to put down opposition and dissent, but it’s small potatoes to what our allies do on a daily basis,” said Norman Pereira, a Russian historian at Dalhousie University. Pereira pointed in particular to Turkey, a NATO member and longtime Western ally, which is still conducting a massive purge of perceived political opponents following a failed 2016 coup attempt.

Very good at diplomacy

Why Russia — a country with less money than Canada and fewer people than Nigeria — runs the world now (8)

The United States expelled 35 Russian diplomats in retaliation for Russian interference in the U.S. election. The next day, Putin magnanimously invited the children of U.S. diplomats to the Kremlin in order to see his Christmas tree. It was a shrewd move, and the product of a country that puts a lot of stock in diplomatic positioning. Since the Soviet era, diplomats around the world have acclaimed their Russian counterparts as well-trained, relentless and extremely professional. “The truth is, actually, Putin, in all of our meetings, is scrupulously polite, very frank,” U.S. President Barack Obama told the Atlantic in 2013. Although the crème de la crèmenature of the diplomatic corps may have diminished under Putin’s tighter control, they’re still scoring some major Russian foreign policy wins: Brokering the Syrian chemical weapons disarmament deal, rapprochement with China and creating the E.U.-style Eurasian Economic Union with Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan.

Advertisem*nt 5

Story continues below

This advertisem*nt has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.

Article content

Recommended from Editorial

  1. Anne Applebaum: Enough with the spy vs. spy — what we know about Trump-Russia is bad enough
  2. Vladimir Putin caps year of Russia -West tension: ‘We are stronger now than any potential aggressor’
  3. Kelly McParland: From Syria to Washington, Putin continues his unprecedented run of success

Priorities, priorities

Why Russia — a country with less money than Canada and fewer people than Nigeria — runs the world now (10)

Between 2014 and early 2016, the Russian ruble lost nearly half its value against the U.S. dollar. The Russian economy is contracting and real incomes dropped as much as nine per cent in 2016. This is the point where many countries in a similar position would dial back their foreign dealings and work on domestic programs. But in Russia, the strategy has been the opposite: Abandon economic worries to double down on efforts to grab geopolitical status. “The Russian mantra is that Russia is a great power (which is actually somewhat dubious — land mass and nuclear weapons aside) and the Kremlin has been able to project that image on the international arena,” Jeanne Wilson, a Russian foreign policy expert at Wheaton College, wrote in an email to the National Post. There’s two ways to see this: Either Russia is soberly deciding to trade wealth for prestige, or Putin is distracting from their poor economy with “wins” abroad. German chancellor Angela Merkel takes the latter view. “He’s afraid of his own weakness,” she said after a famous 2007 meeting in which Putin brought along a large black dog allegedly in order to destabilize the dog-skittish German leader. “Russia has nothing, no successful politics or economy. All they have is this.”

Advertisem*nt 6

Story continues below

This advertisem*nt has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.

Article content

Ruthlessness

Why Russia — a country with less money than Canada and fewer people than Nigeria — runs the world now (11)

In 1985, Hezbollah kidnapped four Russian diplomats in Beirut. In response, according to the Jerusalem Post, the KGB immediately killed a family member of a Hezbollah leader and mailed a piece of the corpse to the kidnappers. The Russian hostages were freed soon after. It’s hard to quantify ruthlessness, but every source contacted by the National Post spoke to a Russian culture of brute endurance; of being “hard.” This makes Russia willing to cross boundaries that other countries wouldn’t touch so openly. “If we find them in the toilet, excuse me, we’ll rub them out in the outhouse,” Putin said of hunting terrorists in 1999. Not even George W. Bush standing on the ruins of the World Trade Center used this kind of language.

Nuclear weapons

Why Russia — a country with less money than Canada and fewer people than Nigeria — runs the world now (12)

And, of course, Russia is one of only two countries that can still annihilate all life on planet earth. Russia has the world’s largest nuclear stockpile with 7,300 weapons, according to Ploughshares Fund. Compare that to North Korea, who makes near-weekly nuclear threats despite a stockpile of only a dozen or so low-powered atomic weapons. India and Pakistan could destroy each other with nuclear weapons. The U.K. and France could lay waste to most of Western Europe. But only Russia and the United States retain the Cold War-era capability to turn the globe radioactive.

• Email: thopper@nationalpost.com | Twitter: TristinHopper

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here.

Article content

Get the latest from Tristin Hopper straight to your inbox

Comments

You must be logged in to join the discussion or read more comments.

Create an AccountSign in

Join the Conversation

Postmedia is committed to maintaining a lively but civil forum for discussion and encourage all readers to share their views on our articles. Comments may take up to an hour for moderation before appearing on the site. We ask you to keep your comments relevant and respectful. We have enabled email notifications—you will now receive an email if you receive a reply to your comment, there is an update to a comment thread you follow or if a user you follow comments. Visit our Community Guidelines for more information and details on how to adjust your email settings.

Trending

  1. FIRST READING: Supreme Court decision opts for 'person with a vagin*' over 'woman'
  2. How a Canadian woman 'deliberately' failed to pay rent for over five years to eight landlords
  3. Freeland touts 'affordable' development renting 330-square-foot units for $1,600
  4. The Terrorist: How a devout Christian kid became a radicalized mass murderer
  5. ‘My job is not to be popular’: Trudeau doubles down on April 1st carbon tax increase

Read Next

Latest from Shopping Essentials

  1. How to wash your duvet cover for long-lasting comfort From wash temperatures to laundry soap, get an expert's insight into how to keep your duvet cover crisp and clean

    7hours ago Shopping Essentials

  2. This Dior launch may be the only makeup product you need this spring A new product from Dior is offering a one-and-done option to achieve the perfect skin pearlescence.

    9hours ago

  3. Advertisem*nt 2

    Story continues below

    This advertisem*nt has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.

  4. Get your greens on the go with these top green drink powders The top athletic green powders that can take your health to new heights

    1day ago Shopping Essentials

  5. Beauty Buzz: Vichy Capital Soleil UV+Age Daily SPF 60, Guerlain Terracotta Healthy Glow Powder Blush, and Annabelle Perfect Fit Ultra-Hydrating Concealer Three buzzed-about beauty products we tried this week.

    1day ago

  6. How much protein do I need? Nazima Qureshi, registered dietitian and nutritionist shares details on how to calculate daily protein intake

    1day ago Shopping Essentials

This Week in Flyers

Why Russia — a country with less money than Canada and fewer people than Nigeria — runs the world now (2024)

FAQs

How is the economy of Russia compared to Canada? ›

Comparison In 2022, Canada ranked 31 in the Economic Complexity Index (ECI 0.85), and 9 in total exports ($587B). That same year, Russia ranked 45 in the Economic Complexity Index (ECI 0.42), and 12 in total exports ($486B).

Why Russian economy is so strong? ›

Oil keeps the Russian economy afloat

In spite of the sanctions, Russia remains one of world's largest oil exporter, and benefits from Saudi Arabia's last year's decision to cut down on crude oil exports. Until then, the kingdom was the world's first oil exporter.

Why is so much of Russia empty? ›

Russia's immense size presents difficulties for resource distribution, infrastructure development, and transportation. Due to their severe weather and isolated locations, several parts of the country—especially in Siberia and the Far East—remain sparsely inhabited.

Is Russia a low income country? ›

In 2022, the Economist calculated that Russia did graduate into the category of high-income economies by 2022, if counted at purchasing power parity rather than the exchange rate but could fall below the threshold because of invasion of Ukraine.

Is Russia richer than Canada? ›

Russia makes less money per year than Canada. For 2016, its $1.3 trillion GDP was roughly on par with Australia, a country with one-sixth the population and less than half the square footage. The country's 147 million population isn't all that impressive either; Nigeria, Bangladesh and Brazil all have more citizens.

Whose economy is stronger the US or Canada? ›

The United States GDP was $24.8 trillion in 2021. The United States has the largest economy globally and Canada ranks 9th at US$2.015 trillion. The US share of the global market economy estimated at US$79.98 trillion, was c. 25% in 2018, which is down from 35% in 2005.

Which country has the strongest economy on the African continent? ›

It is Nigeria, a country in West Africa, which stands out as the most powerful economy on the continent. With a GDP estimated at $477 billion in 2022, Nigeria is at the top of the ranking of the richest African countries, ahead of Egypt and South Africa.

Can Russia afford the war? ›

The Russian regime has no incentive to end the war and deal with that kind of economic reality. So it cannot afford to win the war, nor can it afford to lose it. Its economy is now entirely geared towards continuing a long and ever deadlier conflict.

What are the weaknesses of the Russian economy? ›

The main challenges for Russia's outlook are twofold: consumption growth is likely to weaken even further than previously projected and recovery in investment demand will be slower than previously expected.

Why did Russia sell Alaska? ›

Defeat in the Crimean War further reduced Russian interest in this region. Russia offered to sell Alaska to the United States in 1859, believing the United States would off-set the designs of Russia's greatest rival in the Pacific, Great Britain.

How much of Russia is actually livable? ›

The habitable and sustainable land area of Russia is estimated to be about 35% of its total land area [1]. However, it is important to note that sustaining a population like India and China in Russia would require more than just habitable land.

What are the disadvantages of living in Russia? ›

Cons:
  • Russian citizens need visas to travel to many countries in the world.
  • Climate in some regions is really severe.
  • Most career opportunities are situated in big cities.
  • Moving around the country is expensive due to its size.

Is poverty a problem in Russia? ›

What percentage of Russians live in poverty? Looking at annual figures, Russia's poverty rate has declined since 2015, when it exceeded 13 percent. Approximately seven percent of the population of Russia lived below the national poverty line between October and December 2023.

What is the poorest country in Africa? ›

1. Burundi. Burundi consistently ranks among the poorest countries globally.

What is the poorest nation in the world? ›

By continent or region
  • Somalia.
  • South Sudan.
  • Sudan.
  • Tanzania.
  • The Gambia.
  • Togo.
  • Uganda.
  • Zambia.

Where does Russia's economy rank in the world? ›

Russia was the eleventh largest economy in the world in 2021, with its gross domestic product measured at 1.78 trillion U.S. dollars. In the global ranking by nominal GDP, Russia was positioned between South Korea and Australia.

Where does Canada rank in economy? ›

Canada is one of the world's largest economies and is currently at rank 9. If this is calculated per inhabitant, taking purchasing power parity into account, then Canada is in the list of the world's richest countries in place 26. Inflation in Canada in 2022 was around 6.80%.

Does Canada have the best economy in the world? ›

Canada has the ninth-largest economy in the world as of 2022, with a GDP of $2.14 trillion in USD. International trade, including both exports and imports, is a large component of Canada's economy, each making up about one-third of GDP. Canada's largest trading partners are the U.S., China, and the U.K.

What state has a bigger economy than Russia? ›

Even three U.S. states have larger GDPs than Russia: California ($3.1 trillion), Texas ($1.78 trillion) and New York ($1.7 trillion).

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Neely Ledner

Last Updated:

Views: 6197

Rating: 4.1 / 5 (62 voted)

Reviews: 93% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Neely Ledner

Birthday: 1998-06-09

Address: 443 Barrows Terrace, New Jodyberg, CO 57462-5329

Phone: +2433516856029

Job: Central Legal Facilitator

Hobby: Backpacking, Jogging, Magic, Driving, Macrame, Embroidery, Foraging

Introduction: My name is Neely Ledner, I am a bright, determined, beautiful, adventurous, adventurous, spotless, calm person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.