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Jobs & Careers (Fall 2008)

Everyone has an opinion about the 'chinovnik' - the Russian civil servant. But what do they say about themselves? For the fall edition of Jobs and Careers we spoke to two civil servants. They're young, hard-working and ambitious. And according to one of Russia's top captains of industry, they'd be far better advised to go into business. "There are young people who go to work in state service right after graduation," said billionaire Mikhail Prokhorov in a recent speech to students at his alma mater, the state Financial Academy. "I recommend that you only go into business. Only there will you find drive and real life." So why is it that so many young people, against his advice, are still trying to make a career in the civil service and what are the prospects? And is it something they'd recommend to other young people looking for a high-flying career?



Rambler's Top100

Market Matters: RTS Has Toughest Week Since '99
Trading on the dollar-denominated RTS exchange was suspended three times on Friday as anxiety deepened over whether the U.S. House of Representatives would pass a $700 billion financial sector bailout package and share prices on Russian and international markets plummeted.

Will PR specialists save the world? The financial crisis has added extra work to them.PR agencies are not left at a loose end either. Will this become a test for Russian PR specialists in the area of finance? How far has the Russian PR progressed at all?

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Columnists

Crisis -- What Crisis?
By Yulia Latynina

What Will Happen Next to the U.S. Dollar
By Martin Gilman

A Selective Definition of Democracy
By Alexei Pankin

Medvedev's New Doctrine
By Alexander Golts

Brezhnev Comes to Washington
By Alexei Bayer

Making Strategic Assets Accessible to Investors
By Vladimir Frolov

Nothing to Snivel At
By Michele A. Berdy

Prepare for a Bumpy Ride
By Boris Kagarlitsky

Why Russians Put Stalin at the Top of the List
By Yevgeny Kiselyov

Medvedev's Cure for the Far East
By Nikolai Petrov

Global Economy Rests On American Shoulders
By Konstantin Sonin

U.S. Should Recognize South Ossetia
By Richard Lourie

Russia's Animated Debate
By Mark H. Teeter

Georgia Sees Reminders Of the War Everywhere
By Matthew Collin

Yushchenko Plays the Anti-Russia Card
By Georgy Bovt

A Frightful Wake-Up Call
By Anders Aslund

Walking Carefully From Transdnestr to Yerevan
By Fyodor Lukyanov






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