As the war in Ukraine drags on into its third year, Russia finds itself at a critical economic crossroads. The Kremlin’s war chest is rapidly depleting, and sanctions are tightening the noose around key revenue streams. With the National Wealth Fund almost exhausted and budget deficits ballooning, Russia’s ability to sustain the current pace of war spending into 2025 looks increasingly dubious. While state-controlled media touts the narrative of resilience, the numbers tell a far grimmer story.
Every since Russia fully invaded Ukraine I've been following media stories reporting on the Russian economy by citing western economist's and think tank's analyses. For the last three years it's been dominated by increasingly dire predictions and a sense of "they can't keep this up much longer." And this would raise my hopes that Russia would either collapse or Putin would be forced to negotiate seriously to stop the bleeding. Yet Putin somehow continues to keep finding ways to forestall collapse.
As a non-expert, non-economist I'm now quite jaded when reading analyses like this and pretty heavily discount them. That's because I've had to conclude two things: First, the Russian economy is even more opaque to western analysts than the analysts already admit it is. And second, Putin's absolute dictatorial power and ability to have anyone who complains much thrown out a high window, provides myriad levers to continue kicking the can down the road. While I'm sure doing so will eventually result in serious costs and consequences, Putin only cares about getting control of most of Ukraine (either directly or by political proxy). He figures after that Russia can nurse its deep wounds and pay the piper slowly over a decade or more. He may be wrong, but I think that's his calculus.
I think the only pragmatic course is to discount these analyses and operate as though Putin can continue to survive economically as long as he needs to (and then hope we're wrong and pleasantly surprised).
Both share the same core goal too: to drag their countries back to the mid 20th century. Putin wants the Soviet Union back, and Trump wants 50’s America back. China is immune to this because that time period was uniquely terrible for them.
As the war in Ukraine drags on into its third year, Russia finds itself at a critical economic crossroads. The Kremlin’s war chest is rapidly depleting, and sanctions are tightening the noose around key revenue streams. With the National Wealth Fund almost exhausted and budget deficits ballooning, Russia’s ability to sustain the current pace of war spending into 2025 looks increasingly dubious. While state-controlled media touts the narrative of resilience, the numbers tell a far grimmer story.
Every since Russia fully invaded Ukraine I've been following media stories reporting on the Russian economy by citing western economist's and think tank's analyses. For the last three years it's been dominated by increasingly dire predictions and a sense of "they can't keep this up much longer." And this would raise my hopes that Russia would either collapse or Putin would be forced to negotiate seriously to stop the bleeding. Yet Putin somehow continues to keep finding ways to forestall collapse.
As a non-expert, non-economist I'm now quite jaded when reading analyses like this and pretty heavily discount them. That's because I've had to conclude two things: First, the Russian economy is even more opaque to western analysts than the analysts already admit it is. And second, Putin's absolute dictatorial power and ability to have anyone who complains much thrown out a high window, provides myriad levers to continue kicking the can down the road. While I'm sure doing so will eventually result in serious costs and consequences, Putin only cares about getting control of most of Ukraine (either directly or by political proxy). He figures after that Russia can nurse its deep wounds and pay the piper slowly over a decade or more. He may be wrong, but I think that's his calculus.
I think the only pragmatic course is to discount these analyses and operate as though Putin can continue to survive economically as long as he needs to (and then hope we're wrong and pleasantly surprised).
There’s something darkly funny about the US and Russia both facing economic obliteration in the same year caused by their own hubris.
Old men chasing status and power can’t help themselves as they run out of relevance runway, dragging the rest of us along for the unpleasant ride.
I like that term, 'relevance runway'.
Both share the same core goal too: to drag their countries back to the mid 20th century. Putin wants the Soviet Union back, and Trump wants 50’s America back. China is immune to this because that time period was uniquely terrible for them.
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