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The Warning Signs for Russia’s Economy Are Flashing Red​


Russia’s sanctions-defying economy, propelled higher by the Ukraine war, is suddenly coming back down to earth.

Fueled by massive military spending and steady oil exports, Russia recorded some of the highest growth rates among major economies over the past two years. But in recent weeks economic indicators have been flashing red: Manufacturing activity is declining, consumers are tightening their belts, inflation remains high and the budget is strained.

Russian officials are now openly warning of the risks of a recession, and companies from tractor producers to furniture makers are reducing output. The central bank said Thursday that it would debate cutting its benchmark interest rate later this month after lowering it in June.

The sputtering of Russia’s economic engine is unlikely to alter President Vladimir Putin’s war objectives, as his strategic focus on neutering Ukraine overrides concerns for the broader health of the economy, analysts say. But the slowdown exposes the limits of his war economy and indicates that sanctions, while not dealing a knockout blow, are increasingly taking a toll. If sanctions tighten further or oil prices dip, Russia’s economy could start to totter.

In that, the downturn undermines Putin’s bet that Russia can outlast Ukraine and the West, showing that Moscow would struggle to finance the war indefinitely.

“The growth model based on military spending alone is broken,” said Janis Kluge, a Russia economics expert at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs.
“Capacities in the civilian part have to shrink, freeing up workers so that the war machine can continue to grow. That’s not sustainable.”

Russian Economy Minister Maxim Reshetnikov warned last month that Russia was teetering on the “verge of a recession.” Finance Minister Anton Siluanov called the situation a “perfect storm.”

Putin, for his part, dismissed suggestions that the war is stifling the economy. In an echo of Mark Twain, he said that the reports of its death “are greatly exaggerated.” But the Kremlin leader also warned that a recession or stagflation “should not be allowed under any circumstances.”


After a brief recession in 2022, military spending—the highest since Soviet times, at over 6% of gross domestic product this year—propped up Russia’s economy and dulled the impact of Western sanctions. That compares with around 3% of GDP in the U.S. and around 2% in Germany last year.

Spending on the military and security makes up about 40% of Russia’s total government spending this year. Russia’s ability to reroute oil exports to China, combined with Beijing’s support in supplying electronics and machinery, delivered an additional economic boost.

That made Russia an economic paradox: The most sanctioned major economy in the world was growing faster than the U.S. and most other advanced economies.

But the sugar rush from the military spending created runaway inflation, pushing the central bank to raise interest rates to a record 21% to try to tame it. Higher rates increase borrowing costs for businesses, reducing investment and expansion plans and squeezing profits.

The comedown has already started.

In the first quarter, Russian GDP grew by 1.4% compared with a year earlier, official data shows, down from 4.5% in the fourth quarter of 2024. Russia’s manufacturing sector contracted at its sharpest rate in more than three years in June, according to S&P Global’s purchasing managers’ index. Sales of new cars in Russia dropped nearly 30% in June year-over-year, according to the Association of European Businesses.
Businesses across the country are feeling the brunt.

Rostselmash, Russia’s largest producer of agricultural machinery such as tractors and combine harvesters, said in May that it would cut production and investment and pull forward its mandatory annual leave for its 15,000 employees due to lack of demand.

In Siberia, electricity grid operator Rosseti Sibir has said it was on the verge of bankruptcy due to its high debt load. The company had to halt investments, and it proposed tariff hikes for industrial users in several Siberian regions.

Some analysts say the banking system is also increasingly unstable.

The risks grew from a government decision after the invasion to control war-related lending at major Russian banks, according to a recent report by the Washington, D.C.-based Center for Strategic and International Studies. The state could direct banks to offer preferential loans—on state-determined terms—to Russian businesses involved in the war effort. With high interest rates having risen since then, companies that can’t meet their obligations could potentially force the government to absorb the losses.

Other analysts say that the Russian banking system remains stable and well capitalized, CSIS noted. Still, in May the Moscow-based Center for Macroeconomic Analysis and Short-Term Forecasting wrote in a report that the risk of a protracted systemic banking crisis in 2026 was “moderate” and growing.

The economic woes increase pressure on the Kremlin by shortening the financial runway it has to fund its fight in Ukraine. The government has been running a budget deficit throughout the war and projects it will continue for at least two more years.
That provides an opening for the West if it manages to agree on powerful new sanctions on Moscow.

Oil prices—which have been generally lower this year despite the turmoil in the Middle East—present another risk for Russia, which relies on energy sales for around a third of its budget revenues. The price of Russian crude has been consistently below the level assumed in this year’s budget. Russia’s oil-and-gas revenue in June fell to its lowest level since January 2023, Finance Ministry data showed on Thursday.

“Falling oil prices and tightening of the sanctions regime would be more keenly felt in the current situation,” said Alexandra Prokopenko, a former Russian central bank official who is now a fellow at the Berlin-based Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center. “The risks are high.”

 
Footage of two Ukrainian T-64 and T-80 tanks being destroyed by Russian FPV drones. The drones actually finished off the tanks. The video was shot near the village of Belaya Gora in the Donetsk region. The T-64 and T-80 tanks were produced in the USSR. These tanks are also used by the Russian army. Surprisingly, the T-80 tank has no protection, and its gun is covered, so perhaps the tank was transferred somewhere. Unlike it, the T-64 is seriously protected, it has a lattice protection like "Tsar Mangal", despite this the tank is already damaged. Presumably, the tank ran over a mine.

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Military aid is back on for Ukraine
 
Ukrainian media published footage of a Russian armored vehicle column breaking through to the village of Novoekonomicheskoe, west of Mirnograd in the Pokrovsk direction. A group of armored vehicles broke through from Mirolyubovka and landed troops in the village of Novoekonomicheskoe. In the video, you can see attacks by Ukrainian FPV drones on armored vehicles; judging by the video, not a single tank was hit. The armored vehicle column consists of a lead tank and presumably several infantry fighting vehicles. All the vehicles are equipped with Tsar-Manlal-type protection, thanks to which the vehicles survived.

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F-22 being conscripted.........

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Footage of the use of the X-39 LMUR guided missile in combat in Ukraine by the Russian M-28NM helicopter. These missiles are also used by Ka-52 helicopters. The video was filmed in the village of Tyaginka in the Kherson region. The missile hit the Ukrainian FPV drone control center, located in an abandoned building. The missile hit the doorway.

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Technical information on the X-39 LMUR missile, also called "Product 305"

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The drone war in Ukraine is actively developing. The video shows an attack by a Russian FPV drone on a Ukrainian remotely controlled robotic platform delivering cargo. The video was filmed near Seversk in the Donbass. It also shows attacks by Russian drones on other Ukrainian tracked platforms. The drone models are not reported.

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Recent targets have been Ukrainian refineries, industrial objects and, during the last days, recruiting offices of the Ukrainian military.

These offices are in public buildings. Their addresses are naturally known as the whole mobilization process for additional soldiers is being run by them. The recruiters are hated by the population. Ukrainians are published the addresses of mobilization offices with requests to Russia to hit them.
 
Recent targets have been Ukrainian refineries, industrial objects and, during the last days, recruiting offices of the Ukrainian military.

These offices are in public buildings. Their addresses are naturally known as the whole mobilization process for additional soldiers is being run by them. The recruiters are hated by the population. Ukrainians are published the addresses of mobilization offices with requests to Russia to hit them.
Not surprised. We have people here in the US who would do the same thing.
 
Russian specialists from the Bars-Sarmat Center conducted a high-quality detailed technical inspection of the captured unmanned boat of the Ukrainian army. The Ukrainian sea drone is based on a Mexican-made jet ski. It was launched from the Odessa region and was moving towards Crimea. The second part of the video is an inspection of the satellite navigation system. The sea drone reportedly has a range of up to 400 km, at a speed of up to 90 kilometers per hour, and a warhead of 150 kilograms of explosives.

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Footage of the strike of a Russian Iskander-M ballistic missile on a Ukrainian hangar near the settlement of Baratovka in the Nikolaev region of Ukraine. The hangar was used by the 35th separate marine brigade of Ukraine. Judging by the video, an Iskander-M missile with an air burst and a shrapnel warhead was used. Note the colossal amount of fragments; all objects within the radius of the missile explosion are damaged.

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Episode of the assault by Russian troops on the village of Bessalovka in the Sumy region of Ukraine. The village was stormed on July 7 by units of the 56th Guards Airborne Assault Don Cossack Regiment and the Novorossiysk Guards Airborne Assault Mountain Unit. The assault was carried out by small groups with the support of aviation, artillery and drones. The groups entered in the morning and occupied strongholds of the Ukrainian army on the outskirts of the village. After that, the Ukrainian army sent reinforcements. As a result of the battle, the Ukrainian units were forced to retreat. The video has been shortened, the dead have been removed.

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Sec of State Rubio states 100K Russian soldiers have been killed since January
 
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Sec of State Rubio states 100K Russian soldiers have been killed since January


No surprise here, the Russians are using less and less armored attacks and more infantry. That comes with significant losses.
 
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