Chronology of Cynicism: 30 Years of Tax Breaks for Refineries – Who Will Pay? | SforNews Investigation
CHRONOLOGY OF CYNICISM: 30 YEARS OF THE SAME SCHEME
An Investigation into Alexander Shokhin’s Proposal for Tax Benefits for Oil Refineries
DISCLAIMER
This material is an analytical investigation into the RSPP proposal to extend the federal investment tax deduction to oil refining. The material is based on open data and public statements. We do not provide legal assessments but analyze the systemic logic of this proposal. All conclusions are probabilistic in nature.
INTRODUCTION: THE HEIGHT OF CYNICISM
Alexander Shokhin, head of the Russian Union of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs (RSPP), has proposed extending the federal investment tax deduction to oil refining. Companies restoring refineries after drone attacks would be able to reduce their profit tax by the amount of their investments.
It sounds like support. But this is the height of cynicism in the current situation.
Why? Because for 30 years, these companies have been extracting profits rather than investing in modernization. They privatized plants built at state expense. They received benefits under the Euro-5 technical regulation — and failed to deliver on their promises.
And now that a crisis has arrived, they are once again asking for money. From the state. That is, from us.
CHRONOLOGY OF CYNICISM: 30 YEARS OF THE SAME SCHEME
|
Stage |
What Happened |
Who Won |
Who Borethe Costs |
|
Privatization(1990s) |
Refineries built at state expense were transferred to private owners |
VICs (vertically integrated companies), management |
The state, citizens |
|
Operation (2000–2020) |
Profits were withdrawn as dividends and to offshore accounts; no modernization took place |
VICs, shareholders |
The state, citizens |
|
Euro-5 TechnicalRegulation(2010s) |
The state granted benefits and deferrals in exchange for investment commitments |
VICs |
The state (foregone tax revenue), citizens |
|
Drone Attacks(2026) |
Damage, productionstoppages |
— |
The state, citizens |
|
New Benefits(2026) |
RSPP requests a tax deduction for recovery |
VICs |
The state (foregone tax revenue), citizens |
The result: over 30 years, the VICs received assets, profits, and tax breaks. The state and citizens received costs and risks.
And now the burden is once again being placed on the people, not on the oligarchs.
THESIS 1. THE STATE IS ITS CITIZENS, NOT ITS GOVERNMENT STRUCTURES
The state is not the Kremlin. Not the White House. Not bureaucrats. Not oligarchs.
The state is 146 million citizens. Those who pay taxes. Those who work. Those who face the consequences of decisions made without their participation every day.
When the state grants tax breaks to oligarchs, it takes resources from citizens:
It is not the oligarchs who pay. It is the people.
THESIS 2. THE PURPOSE OF THE STATE IS TO PROTECT ITS CITIZENS
The purpose of the state is to uphold the rule of law, protect human rights and freedoms, and seek paths to social compromise between various strata of society.
What does this mean in the context of oil refineries?
|
Principle |
How It Should Be |
How It Is |
|
Rule of law |
The law is the same for everyone |
VICs receive benefits; independent players do not |
|
Protection of human rights |
Citizens have the right to affordable fuel |
Prices rise while benefits go to oligarchs |
|
Social compromise |
Balance between different social strata |
Private profits, state-covered losses |
The state should protect citizens. But it is protecting the interests of oligarchs.
THESIS 3. WE HAVE THE RIGHT TO DEMAND
Citizens have the right to demand from the state:
We have the right to demand answers. Because the state is us.
THESIS 4. THIS IS NOT SUPPORT — THIS IS A LAST ATTEMPT TO SQUEEZE MORE MONEY OUT OF THE COUNTRY
For 30 years, oligarchs have been extracting profits from the country. They built plants at state expense. They privatized assets. They bought yachts and football clubs.
And now that a crisis has come, they come to the state and say: “Give us money. Otherwise, the industry will collapse.”
But the industry will not collapse because the state failed to give benefits.
It will collapse because they failed to invest in it when they had the chance.
This is not support. This is a last attempt to squeeze more money out of the country. Once again, the burden is being placed on the people, not on the oligarchs.
THESIS 5. WHAT IS ACTUALLY NEEDED
1. Not benefits, but an inspection
Before giving money, we need to check:
2. State equity participation
If the state gives money, it should receive a share in the assets. Or the right to control investments.
3. Tying benefits to results
Benefits should not be granted on a promise, but after investments are confirmed. With independent audits and public reporting.
4. Personal responsibility
Top managers and shareholders who extracted profits should bear responsibility for the state of the assets.
5. Beneficiary audit
Before granting benefits, we should understand:
MAIN CONCLUSION
The dots over the i’s have been placed.
The state is us. And we have the right to demand justice.
This bill cannot be settled with tax breaks. It should be paid by those who created the problem.
A QUESTION TO READERS
Dear readers, are you willing to pay for the restoration of refineries through your taxes, tickets, and groceries?
Or is it time to ask those who extracted profits for 30 years to pay?
We have the right to demand answers. Because the state is us.
P.S. We have prepared a full breakdown of the entire history of Russian oil refineries — from privatization to Euro-5 and the 2026 drone attacks. It will be published this evening. Subscribe to SforNews so you don’t miss it.
This material was prepared by the editorial board of “Kafedra” and SforNews. When citing, reference to the original source is mandatory.
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