How is Russia’s economy doing?

Before the Iran war oil shock – meaning a jump in oil prices and a jump in revenues for the Kremlin – things were looking as bad as they have done since Russia‘s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022.

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A shallow recession of 1.4% in 2022 was followed by solid positive growth in 2023-2024, partly facilitated by high oil prices and partly fuelled by the rise in war-related spending and corporate credit growth. The fiscal position deteriorated, but remained in relatively safe territory, while a consistent current-account surplus “helped soften the impact of approximately half of Russia’s international reserves being immobilised”, explains Marek Dabrowski of the Bruegel think tank. All told, the post-2022 Russian economy demonstrated striking resilience.

War on the Rocks. Germany’s foreign intelligence believes that the war accounts for 10% of GDP and for more than 50% of government spending. Russia’s Centre for Macroeconomic Analysis and Short-Term Forecasting attributes 60%-65% of Russia’s increased industrial output from 2022-2024 to the sectors most implicated in the war on Ukraine, while showing that unrelated industries are declining. Meanwhile, domestic consumption is underpinned by Smertonomika, or “Deathonomics”, whereby wages for soldiers willing to brave the war – and compensation payouts to their families when they are killed – have soared. Pay for soldiers is six times what it was in 2022, while death payouts have risen to the equivalent of $130,000-$180,000 – more than the expected life earnings of many of the young men who die. In short, Russia has mortgaged its future to pay for the war. Eventually, that will have to be repaid.

inflation stood at below 6%. Many Western analysts suspect the reality is worse. The economy will not collapse, says Alexandra Prokopenko in The Economist. “But nor will it recover. It has entered what mountaineers call the death zone: the altitude above 8,000 metres at which the human body consumes itself faster than it can be repaired.” Russia is sustaining a “negative equilibrium”: it has the ability to hold itself together at the cost of steadily destroying its own future capacity. Export revenues are falling and economic weakness means budget gaps cannot be filled with additional tax revenues.

Capital Economics. The country will remain a war-driven, low-growth, low-productivity economy that’s dependent on hydrocarbons – a waning resource in the long run – and under chronic fiscal pressure. “Russia can probably continue waging war for the foreseeable future,” says Prokopenko. “But no climber can survive the death zone indefinitely – and not all climbers who attempt the descent survive it.”

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