Publication

Oct 2002

This paper addresses aspects of economic geography and regional economic development in Russia after the fall of communism with a focus on developments in industrial location. The paper discusses principles of regional development, the inherited Soviet economic geography and Russia’s macroeconomic development. Furthermore, the paper presents evidence on regional development and changes with respect to economic policy and federal-regional relations. The paper shows that Russia has a geographically concentrated economic landscape with a trend of welfare and activity being relocated to central regions.

Download English (PDF, 40 pages, 1.0 MB)
Author Per Botolf Maurseth
Series NUPI Working Papers
Issue 632
Publisher Norwegian Institute of International Affairs (NUPI)
Copyright © 2002 Norwegian Institute of International Affairs (NUPI)
JavaScript has been disabled in your browser