Not in a sense that would preserve current hydrocarbon rent-based redustribution of wealth. Russian society, in general, oscillates between autarky and transformational openness to foreign experience, and it is sometimes said that during late Yeltsin years, specifically in 1998-99, after Russia had defaulted on sovereign debt, main source of fear among federal level persons of power lay in forced self-sustainability of regional subunits. Probably that’s why low sovereign debt/GDP ratio looks like something of a fetish for Putin, whose rising had been catalyzed by 1998 default.
I think Russia in its current borders satisfies condition of providing more in imperial unity than apart, but ongoing unique experiment of "reverse autarky" (i.e., dictated by necessity, wide recreation of outworn, not modern, techniques of industry and management), started in February, might break even, albeit slowly (sanctions and war with Iraq didn't cripple Iran, after all). Precisely because it is unique in its kind, given all challenges in predicting the past from present day. As Philip K. Dick said, now wait for last year.