The Japan Times - Russia battles to shore up sanction-hit economy

EUR -
AED 4.257886
AFN 75.350797
ALL 96.573456
AMD 442.507068
ANG 2.075114
AOA 1063.029095
ARS 1607.882681
AUD 1.781496
AWG 2.086643
AZN 1.974346
BAM 1.954251
BBD 2.334749
BDT 141.717674
BGN 1.955816
BHD 0.437057
BIF 3413.979997
BMD 1.159246
BND 1.509104
BOB 8.038629
BRL 6.158151
BSD 1.159181
BTN 102.657817
BWP 16.478939
BYN 3.954765
BYR 22721.22511
BZD 2.331583
CAD 1.626364
CDF 2556.137974
CHF 0.922464
CLF 0.027413
CLP 1075.398108
CNY 8.239632
CNH 8.240768
COP 4354.41846
CRC 580.639784
CUC 1.159246
CUP 30.720024
CVE 110.56307
CZK 24.150578
DJF 206.02085
DKK 7.468652
DOP 74.520935
DZD 150.980176
EGP 54.546939
ERN 17.388693
ETB 181.028117
FJD 2.6425
FKP 0.879762
GBP 0.880268
GEL 3.127873
GGP 0.879762
GHS 12.750894
GIP 0.879762
GMD 84.045819
GNF 10066.021651
GTQ 8.882959
GYD 242.527772
HKD 9.011197
HNL 30.495829
HRK 7.533708
HTG 151.839652
HUF 384.028128
IDR 19416.909802
ILS 3.769619
IMP 0.879762
INR 102.73512
IQD 1518.596357
IRR 48804.264311
ISK 147.004059
JEP 0.879762
JMD 185.952614
JOD 0.821891
JPY 179.8727
KES 150.125812
KGS 101.376217
KHR 4646.317319
KMF 491.520281
KPW 1043.320989
KRW 1694.041534
KWD 0.355668
KYD 0.966034
KZT 605.510071
LAK 25150.066006
LBP 103806.922421
LKR 355.87793
LRD 209.813701
LSL 19.785218
LTL 3.422952
LVL 0.701216
LYD 6.319991
MAD 10.706214
MDL 19.642431
MGA 5190.885693
MKD 61.471278
MMK 2434.216194
MNT 4141.918367
MOP 9.281044
MRU 46.055496
MUR 53.103559
MVR 17.851084
MWK 2010.106785
MXN 21.312242
MYR 4.810956
MZN 74.134498
NAD 19.785218
NGN 1674.681996
NIO 42.656191
NOK 11.698531
NPR 164.252108
NZD 2.045229
OMR 0.445726
PAB 1.159181
PEN 3.907003
PGK 4.900116
PHP 68.379872
PKR 327.620727
PLN 4.230611
PYG 8160.531946
QAR 4.225251
RON 5.084914
RSD 117.206775
RUB 94.190746
RWF 1685.464098
SAR 4.347486
SBD 9.557015
SCR 15.875767
SDG 697.280041
SEK 10.97401
SGD 1.510167
SHP 0.869735
SLE 27.125576
SLL 24308.810596
SOS 661.441357
SRD 44.766031
STD 23994.055399
STN 24.480597
SVC 10.142961
SYP 12817.561641
SZL 19.780322
THB 37.60583
TJS 10.71111
TMT 4.068954
TND 3.413195
TOP 2.791187
TRY 49.039129
TTD 7.860549
TWD 36.13022
TZS 2830.162712
UAH 48.753658
UGX 4141.717266
USD 1.159246
UYU 46.103458
UZS 13955.938495
VES 273.770824
VND 30551.93305
VUV 141.614538
WST 3.261789
XAF 655.437499
XAG 0.022775
XAU 0.000285
XCD 3.132921
XCG 2.089144
XDR 0.814813
XOF 655.437499
XPF 119.331742
YER 276.509236
ZAR 19.876041
ZMK 10434.581609
ZMW 26.285166
ZWL 373.276797
  • CMSC

    -0.0510

    23.849

    -0.21%

  • RBGPF

    0.3500

    76

    +0.46%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1500

    14.4

    -1.04%

  • NGG

    0.5400

    77.92

    +0.69%

  • RIO

    0.4300

    71.06

    +0.61%

  • RELX

    -0.7700

    40.56

    -1.9%

  • BP

    0.3150

    36.845

    +0.85%

  • GSK

    0.6450

    47.825

    +1.35%

  • AZN

    0.5900

    89.69

    +0.66%

  • BTI

    0.7530

    54.883

    +1.37%

  • SCS

    -0.1400

    15.56

    -0.9%

  • VOD

    -0.0100

    12.31

    -0.08%

  • JRI

    -0.1100

    13.54

    -0.81%

  • CMSD

    -0.1100

    23.88

    -0.46%

  • BCE

    0.0950

    22.925

    +0.41%

  • BCC

    -1.4400

    67.6

    -2.13%

Russia battles to shore up sanction-hit economy
Russia battles to shore up sanction-hit economy

Russia battles to shore up sanction-hit economy

Russian authorities are scrambling to stem panic as massive sanctions over Moscow's invasion of Ukraine delivered the worst economic shocks since the fall of the Soviet Union.

Text size:

Asked by reporters on Wednesday whether the economy would survive, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov conceded the current situation was "hostile".

Russia's economy is "experiencing serious blows" aimed at undermining its integrity, he said, while vowing: "We will keep standing".

Russians encountered a bleak new economic reality after Western powers agreed to impose far-reaching sanctions.

The ruble has fallen by more than a third against the dollar and euro, Russian planes are barred from all but a handful of countries and ordinary people face serious doubts over the future of their careers, salaries and loan repayments.

- 'Don't panic' -

Valentina Matviyenko, the speaker of the upper house of parliament, called for everyone "to switch on their brains and analyse everything that prevents businesses from working", warning against "any panic".

President Vladimir Putin signed a decree on developing the IT sector, allowing male programmers to avoid the draft.

Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin reiterated longstanding policy goals to replace imports with local products and diversify the economy.

But these statements appeared to offer little protection from looming economic meltdown.

The Moscow Stock Exchange remained closed for a third day on Wednesday after the Bank of Russia said it had decided that trading would not be resumed except for the purchase of rubles.

The ruble has slumped following the West's decision to slap massive economic sanctions on Russia over the invasion of its pro-Western neighbour Ukraine last week.

It was changing hands at around 103 rubles to the dollar on Wednesday at 14H30 GMT and 112 rubles to the euro.

Russia has announced bans on foreign investors selling Russian shares or withdrawing funds from its financial markets.

Putin has also banned travellers from taking more than $10,000 in cash out of the country.

The Russian finance ministry has said it is in favour of abolishing sales or value-added tax on purchases of gold bars by private individuals.

Mishustin said buying gold "could be a good alternative to buying foreign currency".

In the face of Western sanctions, Russia's biggest lender, Sberbank, announced it was quitting the European market.

This came after European banking regulators ruled that Sberbank's Austria-based Europe arm and its subsidiaries were "failing or likely to fail" and would be wound up.

The bank's shares later plunged 94 percent to just 1 US cent on the London Stock Exchange, while earlier on Wednesday it had announced 2021 profits of 1.246 trillion rubles (around $12 billion at the current very low exchange rate).

Russian companies and oligarchs targeted by sanctions have said they are cutting back operations and foreign companies are rushing to exit, including oil and gas majors such as Shell and BP, which have invested billions in the country.

- 'Now is the time' -

Hundreds of thousands of jobs -- perhaps more -- could be lost as foreign companies ask how they will pay employees given the new restrictions on Russian banks' dealings with the outside world.

"One immediate effect of the war in Ukraine will be to push Russia several places down the league table of the world's largest economies," said Neil Sharing, Group Chief Economist at Capital Economics.

"However, the impact on the global economy over the long run will depend to a large extent on its political and geo-political legacy," he added in an analyst note.

While Russians pride themselves on their ability to weather crises, the last two decades have brought them benefits from closer integration with the global economy.

Middle-class Russians have been able to holiday abroad, eat out at restaurants and shop at malls. Putin's popularity is based at least partly on the greater economic stability since he became president in 2000.

Since 2014 when Russia faced sanctions over its annexation of Crimea from Ukraine, the state has built up substantial reserves to withstand such tactics.

But ordinary Russians have since seen their spending power eroded while many have taken out loans and, according to a Levada survey last year, two-thirds have no savings.

Financial advisor Sergei Leonidov advised Russians: "If you have loans or other obligations to banks, now is the time to quickly pay them off."

"Because of the crisis, the risk of losing sources of income is rising," he told RIA Novosti state news agency.

M.Ito--JT