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ardemchenkov | 10 years ago
Normally if you get an access to the market, to be really successful and legal there, you will open a local office, pay taxes, bring your own money and 3rd party investments, create jobs and so on.
In Russia it will work like this: "Our forthcoming policy brief on the new Russian amendment estimates the losses from this amendment to -0.27% of GDP, equivalent to a loss of 286 billion roubles (US$ 5.7 billion). Russia’s economy is already in severe recession, and the Russian economy is likely to contract by 2-3% this year. Investments in the Russian economy would drop by -1.4% or 187 billion roubles, with considerable effects on employment. The manufacturing sectors are hardest hit, as they must also absorb cost increases from their suppliers in the service industry."[1]
Also when I mentioned "small companies", it was not only about foreign companies, but about Russian companies as well. Many of them use foreign hosting providers and cloud services because the quality is higher.
Imagine that every county in the World will require the same thing. For monsters like Google and Facebook it will be an issue but still solvable issue. For small and middle size business it will cost a lot.
And if we take a look from the Russian Government point of view, if you have a choice to check that Google follows the law or to check that 100 small companies follow the same law. Of course, they will check 100 companies, because it's easier to find something there than losing a lot of money, time and other resources fighting against Google.
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