The Finance Ministry is ready to okay a proposal by Rosgosstrakh's private investors to issue new shares. The final say lies with Prime Minister Vladimir Putin. The Finance Ministry will offer Putin two options for Rosgosstrakh, a ministry source told Vedomosti. According to the source, Finance Minister Alexei Kudrin held a meeting last week to discuss the matter, at which it was decided to send the Prime Minister a memorandum describing the two choices.
At the end of last week, the Russian government raised duties on chicken and pork imports in 2009. Russian meat producers are satisfied with measures that restrict competition with cheaper meat imports. However, economists believe that in crisis conditions, the government must support ordinary consumers, whose diet depends on the prices of chicken imports. Experts propose price regulation for Russian meat-producing companies in order to prevent a surge in meat prices.
The Central Election Commission cited people awarded for contributing to the electoral system's development. To mark the 15th anniversary of Russia's electoral system, the Central Election Commission yesterday awarded President Dmitry Medvedev and Prime Minister Vladimir Putin CEC commemorative badges signifying "those who have made a significant contribution to the development and functioning of Russia's electoral system." The list includes speakers from both houses of parliament, former and sitting deputies, and all prime ministers with the exception of Mikhail Kasyanov.
The decision to create the commission was adopted Wednesday. It will be composed of MPs, officials, managers and businessmen, including Alexander Abramov ("Evraz"), Andrei Borodin (the Bank of Moscow), Sergei Generalov ("Industrial Investors"), Anatoly Karachinsky (IBS) and David Yakobashvili ("Wimm-Bill-Dann"). (See the full list at www.vedomosti.ru) The commission will be headed by Alexander Shokhin, a member of the United Russia presidium and the head of the Russian Union of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs. The commission's members are not obliged to join United Russia.
No demand for the company's products, personnel on vacation, the working week cut down to three days, these are the typical symptoms of Russian companies damaged by the global economic crisis. Prime Minister Vladimir Putin not only makes out "prescriptions" from the Government House but pays visits to the "diseased" as well. Last week he visited the NPO Saturn and Avtodizel, the latter part of the GAZ Group. Last Thursday, he arrived in Rostov-on-Don to support a major farm equipment manufacturer, the Rostselmash plant.
A week has elapsed since Vladimir Putin's latest Q&A session. Though he has changed office from President to Prime Minister since the previous session of December 2007, the number of addresses has actually risen, according to the calculations of meticulous experts. Mr Putin set another record-the session lasted three hours and eight minutes, three minutes longer than in 2007, with 80 questions answered, as opposed to 72 in 2007. All told, there were 1,636,800 telephone calls and 642,000 SMS messages.
The call received by Prime Minister Putin from the mother of a six-year-old amputee stirred up all of Bashkiria. Ilvira Fayurshina from the village of Karmasan in the Ufa area complained that her adopted son Kostya Irayev, whose leg was amputated when he was three months old, was forced to endure annual examinations at a medical commission to confirm the physical disability.
Russian developers are sharply reducing construction and are renouncing new projects. This may jeopardize the high-priority Affordable Housing national project and prevent the Government from commissioning 80 million square metres of housing by 2010, as promised by Prime Minister Vladimir Putin last year. Regional authorities say developers are no longer interested in available construction sites.
Yesterday, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin announced that a state commission will be created to work on the anti-recessionary programme and the analysis of economic and social developments in Russia. The new commission will be chaired by First Deputy Prime Minister Igor Shuvalov, who has been meeting with businessmen for the last few months to involve them in anti-recessionary planning in accordance with the Prime Minister's order.
Prime Minister Vladimir Putin promised to cut migrant-worker quotas in 2009 by half. Instead of fulfilling this promise, the Government has halved possible reserve-quota increases or declines. Health and Social Development Minister Tatiana Golikova, rather than the Prime Minister, will decide whether to admit two million or six million migrants when the official quota is 3.97 million workers.