The Russian economy has held on despite numerous predictions of its inevitable decline ever since the country launched its invasion of Ukraine nearly three years ago. In 2022, experts had forecast an economic decline of 10% to 15% and Russia’s isolation from the global economy. In 2023, the economic bogeyman was a huge hole in the state budget brought on by the West’s embargo and price cap on Russian oil. But neither of these negative predictions came true: the economic decline in the first year of the war was marginal, and the budget saw even more oil revenue than expected due to high prices and Russia’s shadow fleet of tankers.
For the coming year, the bogeymen chosen by the more pessimistic economists are impoverishment and rising prices. The war is increasingly taking its toll on the poorest people in Russia, economist Igor Lipsits said in an interview with Novaya Europe, as the Central Bank’s measures to combat galloping inflation — which include hiking the key interest rate up to a record-breaking 21% — will inevitably lead to fewer goods and services, higher retail prices, and a fall in real incomes.