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Russia keeps interest rate steady amid worries of inflation

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Russia’s central bank kept its key interest rate at 7.5% on Friday, citing risks of increased inflation and restrained consumer demand as economists warned that the war in Ukraine and Western sanctions were continuing to sap productivity.


The Bank of Russia said in a statement that “the external conditions for the Russian economy remain complicated and significantly limit economic activity.” It said consumer prices rose at an annual rate of 12% last month, pushed by a tight labour market that was accelerating wage growth.


The Russian economy has come under severe international sanctions in response to Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine, but it has defied expectations of a collapse unseen since the painful post-Soviet transformation in the early 1990s.


On Thursday, President Vladimir Putin radiated confidence at a meeting with top government ministers in which he said the Russian economy would contract 2.5% this year, which is somewhat more optimistic than the International Monetary Fund’s estimate of a 3.5% shrinkage. Accusing the West of waging “an economic war” against Moscow and praising his government’s “responsible financial policy,” Putin said the country’s economy had avoided an outright collapse.


Still, some Russian economists predicted that the worst is yet to come. Yevgeny Nadorshin, the chief economist at the PF Capital consulting company in Moscow, warned that the Russian economy could now enter a deeper downturn that cannot be cushioned by increased government spending as before.


The mobilisation of recruits to help fight in Ukraine, and an exodus of some highly skilled upper-middle-class workers, would have a negative effect on productivity, he said. In addition, the government’s increased focus on military spending will make the economy less productive.


“We are doomed to deal with a tough deficit of highly effective labour while sanctions limit our way to compensate for this in terms of imports of high-end technology,” Nadorshin said in a telephone interview.


In late February, after Putin’s decision to send troops to Ukraine, inflation surged in Russia, and the central bank more than doubled its benchmark interest rate, to 20%. Since then, it has cut the rate six times as inflation has eased and the bank tried to stimulate an economy dealing with increased isolation.


The central bank projected that annual inflation would decline to as low as 5% in 2023 and 4% in 2024.


Dmitry Polevoy, the chief strategist at Locko Invest, an asset management company in Moscow, said that sanctions would have a prolonged effect on Russia’s economy and that it was no longer important how much it will contract this year.


“What is interesting is how much deeper will the contraction be next year than what the government expects,” he said, noting that the widening budget deficit was turning into “the main headache” for the central bank.


Indeed, the Bank of Russia said on Friday that the budget deficit might force it to tighten its policy to control inflation.


For years, the Russian economy, and its tax revenues, relied on huge exports of fossil fuels.


But the country’s energy industry has been upended by the war in Ukraine, most recently by a European Union embargo on Russian oil and the Group of 7’s price cap on Russian crude, both of which took effect Dec 5. Last week, Russia’s finance minister said the country’s budget deficit will reach 2% of economic output this year, up from earlier predictions of 0.9%, according to TASS, a state news agency.


The central bank noted that unemployment in Russia had dropped to a record low, partly because the mobilisation of troops to join fighting in Ukraine had reduced the supply of available workers. In its Friday statement, the central bank warned that the conscription effort had forced employers to increase salaries.


Outside Russia, the effects of the war in Ukraine have manifested in soaring energy and food prices, pushing inflation in Europe, the United States and elsewhere far above levels that policymakers try to maintain.


— The New York Times


Ivan Nechepurenko


The writer has been a reporter with The New York Times since 2015, covering politics, economics, sports, and culture in Russia, Ukraine, Belarus and other former Soviet republics.


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