This study examines informal financial practices in the Russian music industry in the context of administrative influence and asymmetric institutional relations. It focuses on interactions between commercial actors, including recording studios, producers, concert organizers, artist managers, and independent creative entrepreneurs, and non-commercial or quasi-public organizations with administrative leverage. The research highlights situations where formally voluntary participation in cultural, charitable, social, or patriotic initiatives may take on features of economic coercion. In such cases, financial contributions, sponsorships, or unpaid services may arise not only from market decisions, but also from institutional dependency, regulatory vulnerability, reputational pressure, or fear of negative consequences. The paper analyzes how weak legal safeguards, blurred boundaries between state-affiliated and non-state actors, and increased administrative sensitivity in cultural activity contribute to informal financial obligations. It also considers the effects on independent participants, including economic instability, self-censorship, psychological stress, and reduced professional autonomy. The study is based on qualitative analysis of public sources, legal frameworks, industry observations, and comparative institutional approaches. It aims to identify structural mechanisms of informal economic pressure and assess their impact on independent cultural entrepreneurship in contemporary Russia.
Sergei Buniatov (Sat,) studied this question.
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