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Rural informal economy of the Crimean village Novoalekseevka

Сельская неформальная экономика крымского села Новоалексеевка

Gusakov, Timur (Гусаков, Тимур) ()
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Gusakov, Timur (Гусаков, Тимур): Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration

Russian Peasant Studies, 2017, vol. 2, issue 4, 107-129

Abstract: The article considers the situation in the Crimean village as a result of the dynamic development of informal economy in the 1990s after the collapse of the Soviet Union. The author tries to adapt the existing classifications of informal economy to the specific features of rural Crimea, in which informal relations are primarily determined by the exogenous forces such as the return of deported peoples, the collapse of the collective farms system and peculiarities of the Ukrainian state building. The Crimean countryside became a hostage of the social-economic transformations of the post-Soviet period, and found the only way to adapt and survive under the “wild capitalism” in the refusal to follow the rules of ineffective formal institutions and in replacing them with informal ones. “Self-reliance” became the main slogan of the Crimean village in the ‘dashing 1990s’. Ethnic, ideological and intercultural disagreements and a lack of trust determined a new model of coexistence of rural residents—a commonalty (an analogue of the pre-revolutionary rural community) constituted by a network of informal ties. Combinations of various mental features determine specific types of informal economy such as a traditional shift to trade and agriculture due to the available resource base. Transformations of the institutional environment and social-economic stabilization in the 2000s contributed to the reduction of informal sector in the rural economy of the Crimea.

Keywords: Crimea; countryside; informal economy; shadow economy; agriculture; peasantization; commonalty (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2017
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