What happened to the revenues
The total budget revenues have fallen by 35% compared to last January, reaching 1.3 trillion rubles (€16.6 billion). Oil and gas revenues have dropped by 46% to 426 billion rubles (€5.4 billion). The Russian Ministry of Finance suggests that this is due to the falling prices for Russia’s flagship Urals crude and the decline in gas exports. Gas supply has nearly halved over the year, while the price of Urals dropped by about 30% due to Western sanctions, standing at about $50 per barrel, Novaya-Europe previously reported.
The non-oil and gas revenues also fell: by 28%. The decrease in other revenues was due to the introduction of an accelerated tax reimbursement process in April of the previous year.
Another possible explanation was provided by two federal officials who wished to remain anonymous to Faridaily, a blog by Russian journalist Farida Rustamova. According to them, an additional factor for the decrease in revenues was that some companies had paid more taxes than they were due in previous periods. This happened due to Russia’s Federal Tax Service switching to a united accounting system for payments.
In total, the revenues fell by 733 billion rubles (€9.4 billion) compared to last January. The 1.1-trillion-ruble (59%) rise in expenditures greatly contributed to the budget deficit.