I kinda missed the inflammatory inflation argument, but I'll post anyway:
Okay. You'll see.
Greetings from Belarus - which according to our resident Scotsman is the North Korea of Europe!
From 1992, when the Belarusian rouble was introduced and up to early 1996 the inflation rate in Belarus never dropped below 500% - it peaked in August 1994 and reached 2796%. In 1996,
when the support of our liberal opposition was at its highest, it dropped to 34%. When Lukashenko was embroiled in a conflict with the liberal Supreme Soviet of Belarus in October 1996 the inflation rate was at 34.5%, from then it rose to 74% in 1997. After Russia defaulted on its debts due to excellent financial policies of Yeltsin and his fellow US-backed liberals on the 17th of August 1998, our inflation rate jumped from 40% in July 1998 to 357% in July 1999 - back then, the National Bank of Belarus had to issue banknotes of 500 000, 1 000 000 and 5 000 000 roubles. After the denomination of 2001, it slowly lowered to 5.9% in February 2010.
In 2011-2012 we had another major inflation wave - some say it was caused by our government completely ignoring monetarist regulations and printing more money, some say it was caused by an attempt by friends of Russian president Medvedev to pressure Belarus into giving up its major industrial plants to Russian oligarchs by withdrawing money from the country. Either way, the inflation steadily rose throughout 2011 and jumped to 108% around December 2011. During the summer of that year our opposition, inspired by the success of Arab Spring coups, tried to start another "democratic revolution" with the help of social media, but like all other attempts at overthrowing the Belarusian government over the past two decades, it failed. Despite the cries of Belarusian opposition media promising higher inflation in 2012, it dropped to 15-16%. The current weakening of the Russian rouble has driven inflation to the current rate of around 20%.
With the exception of our opposition's failed endeavour of 2011, neither of the inflation waves brought upon any significant social outrage. Belarus is a small country which is quite dependent on imports, so very high inflation is way more harmful for us than it is for Russia, and yet Lukashenko still remains in power.
I used the data from
this handy graph.