Belarus is a country better known for its Soviet-style economy and often dubbed “Europe’s last dictatorship”. Yet one industry has escaped government interference: IT. And it’s thriving.
It’s in Minsk that one of the most popular PC games in the U.S. and Europe was developed. World of Tanks boasts some 100 million players joining virtual battles in World War II-era tanks.
And despite its international success, its developer has kept a major operation in the capital, in a high-tech park home to a dozen other companies including U.S.-based EPAM Systems, founded by two Belarusians in 1993.
Belarusian software engineers are also behind Japanese-controlled Viber messenger and the MSQRD selfie app bought by Facebook earlier this month.
A model for change
The success of the country’s IT sector, which taps the nation’s low-cost, skilled engineers, is now fueling hopes it could be used as a model for transforming the mostly state-run – and depressed – economy.
Companies in Minsk’s high-tech zone employ 24,000 people and last year had exports worth $700 million. By contrast, the state-run Gomselmash, employing 14,000, sold just one combine-harvester in the month of December, contributing to just $90 million in exports.
The economy shrank 4 percent last year, hit by a recession and international sanctions in neighbour Russia, but the software park grew 20 percent and is expected to do the same in 2016.
“The Republic of Belarus doesn’t have resources. We don’t have oil, or gas, or ferrous or non-ferrous metals,” said the park’s director Valery Tsepkalo. “So it’s obvious that the only thing we could rely on, in this case, was mental power, education and the abilities of our people. And first of all young people.”
The Belarusian government has invited the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) to prepare five large state-owned companies for privatization.
Officially, the unemployment in our country is reducing – if judging by the number of registrations at the labor exchange; however, the number of jobs doesn’t increase in the economy.
Recently Belarus State Military Industrial Committee announced that in the first half of 2016 its enterprises earned a net profit of $80m, thus over-fulfilling the assigned export plans by a quarter.
Poor economic conditions in the countryside, restrictions, unfair competition, inefficiency of state-owned agricultural enterprises also contribute to this ‘success story’, writes Aliaksandr Filipau.
On 20 June Lukashenka met with vice-chair and president of the Chinese CITIC Group Corporation Wang Jiong; it seems especially important in light of Lukashenka’s planned visit to China in September.
All the conditions for everyone to be able to earn a decent salary have been enabled in Belarus, however, it is necessary to make some effort to get the money, assumes the president.
Belarus is losing currency earnings – in the 6 months of 2016 the country earned 3 billion less than in the same period in 2015. Instead of removing the causes of the flop the state relies on magic.
He said Belarus would likely face economic tightening not only as a result of the coronavirus pandemic but also a Russian trade oil crisis that worsened this past winter.
In his report, philosopher Gintautas Mažeikis discusses several concepts that have been a part of the European social and philosophical thought for quite a time.
It is impossible to change life in cities just in three years (the timeline of the “Agenda 50” campaign implementation). But changing the structure of relationships in local communities is possible.