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Home Politics

Latest sanctions begin to bite in Russia as Moscow admits deficit impact

INBV News by INBV News
December 28, 2022
in Politics
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Latest sanctions begin to bite in Russia as Moscow admits deficit impact
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Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks during a news conference after a gathering of the State Council on youth policy in Moscow, Russia, December 22, 2022. 

Sergey Guneev | Sputnik | Reuters

The newest round of Western sanctions against Russia over its invasion of Ukraine are starting to pinch the country’s economy.

Russian Finance Minister Anton Siluanov reportedly told journalists Tuesday that an oil price cap imposed by the G-7 (Group of Seven) major economies, in addition to the European Union and Australia, is squeezing Russian export income and can potentially push Moscow’s budget deficit higher than the expected 2% next yr.

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Price caps on Russia’s crude and refined oil exports could force the Kremlin to chop output by between 5% and seven% next yr, the RIA news agency cited Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak as saying Friday. Nonetheless, Moscow should find a way to finance the shortfall through domestic bond issuance and its rainy day fund, officials have suggested.

The 27 countries of the EU also agreed in June to ban the acquisition of Russian crude oil from Dec. 5.

“It’s still too early to totally assess the impact of the G7 oil price cap and the EU’s ban on Russian crude imports which got here into effect on fifth December, but initial signs suggest that Russia’s economy is beginning to feel the pinch,” said Nicholas Farr, emerging Europe economist at Capital Economics.

“High-frequency data show that Russian oil exports have fallen because the sanctions were introduced and the spread between Brent crude oil prices over Urals oil prices widened to a six-month high [last] week.”

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Farr suggested that it will compound the hit to Russia’s energy revenue from falls in global prices in recent months. International benchmark Brent crude fell from a peak of around $98 per barrel in October to around $77 earlier this month, recovering to around $84.50/bbl by Tuesday morning in Europe.

Meanwhile, the Russian ruble fell by almost 10% against the dollar last week, making it by far the worst-performing EM currency after defying expectations for much of the yr.

Farr suggested a key consequence of a weakening ruble can be upward pressure on inflation on account of higher import costs. The Bank of Russia (CBR) ended its run of rate of interest cuts in October and upon keeping its monetary policy unchanged in December, warned that inflationary risks “prevail” over disinflationary ones.

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If the ruble continues to fall in 2023, Farr suggested that the CBR could also be forced to take a look at reintroducing rate hikes as a way to keep inflation under control, and Capital Economics believes the erosion of Russian resilience to Western sanctions will emerge as a key theme of 2023.

“Russia has benefited significantly from the boost to its terms of trade from high commodity prices in 2022, but…this support to the economy now appears to be fading,” Farr said in a note Friday.

“We expect that Russia’s economy will suffer one other contraction in 2023. Meanwhile, falling energy revenues signifies that Russia’s balance sheets will come under strain.”

Having been a key pillar of strength for the Russian economy this yr, Capital Economics expects the present account surplus to “shrink rapidly in the approaching months.”

“There is a high risk that a big external rebalancing is required from 2024, which is able to keep growth extremely sluggish,” Farr added.

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