Russian officials predict recession in 2015

December 16, 2014 David Miller <http://rbth.com/author/David+Miller> , special 
to RBTH 

Russia is expected to enter a recession next year for the first time since the 
global financial crisis in 2009 as the ruble and oil prices continue to fall. 

Share by e-mail  
<mailto:?subject=Russian%20officials%20predict%20recession%20in%202015&body=http://rbth.com/business/2014/12/16/russian_officials_predict_recession_in_2015_42283.html%0d%0a%0d%0aSent%20from%20http://rbth.com/>
 

 

Crude oil sank below $60 per barrel in December for the first time since 2010. 
Source: Getty Images / Fotobank 

Economists within the Russian government and the World Bank predict that Russia 
will enter recession in 2015, as historic
declines in the price of oil and 
stubbornly persistent inflation usher in the first contraction
since 2009.

The Russian economy has taken a beating in recent months as
oil, the country’s 
main export and the source of roughly half of the government’s tax income, slid

to five-year lows. Meanwhile,
 inflation reached 9.1 percent in November 
compared to a year earlier as a drop in the nation’s currency, the ruble, 
pushed up the price Russians must pay for
imported goods.


 


Medvedev urges Russia to address dependence on world oil prices  
<http://rbth.com/business/2014/12/11/medvedev_urges_russia_to_address_dependence_on_world_oil_prices_42161.html>
 

The nation’s economy will probably shrink about 0.8 percent in 2015, deputy 
economy minister Alexei Vedev said in early December, citing a ministry

forecast. The ministry had previously predicted growth of about 1.2 percent 
next year.

“Most macroeconomic indicators for the economy will worsen through the next 
three quarters and will look a whole lot worse by the time we get to next 
summer,” wrote Chris Weafer, a senior partner at the Moscow-based Macro 
Advisory and a long-time observer of Russia’s economy, in a note posted on the 
firm’s Web site. 

“Where there can be more of a debate is about whether there will be meaningful 
recovery from next autumn.”

Oil and recession

Russia’s Finance Ministry said it tentatively supported the forecast for a 0.8 
percent decline in 2015 — but only on the assumption that oil prices average 
about $80 a barrel.

The contraction may accelerate to 3.5 percent or 4 percent if the price of oil 
averages $60 a barrel or less, the Finance Ministry estimates, according to a 
statement posted on the ministry’s website by the director of the long-term 
strategic planning department, Maxim Oreshkin, on Dec. 2.

Crude oil sank below $60 per barrel in December for the first time since 2010 
as the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries decided not to reduce 
output, and shale-oil production in the U.S. continued to rise. Oil prices 
continued to fall throughout the month.

Russia, currently the world’s biggest energy exporter, is pumping crude at 
near-record levels of more than 10 million barrels a day. Oil and natural gas 
accounted for 68 percent of Russia’s total exports in 2013, according to the 
U.S. Energy Information Agency. 

Rising prices

Inflation may reach 9.8 percent year-on-year in 2014 and peak at “double-digit 
growth” in the first quarter of 2015, Moscow-based brokerage UralSib predicted. 
Inflation will spike following the sharp decline of the ruble “because normally 
prices grow for 3–4 months after an exchange rate shock,” UralSib analysts 
Alexei Devyatov and Olga Sterina wrote in a note to investors on Dec. 5. 

The ruble has lost more than a third of its value against the dollar this year, 
shrinking Russians’ purchasing power. But the falling ruble has also relieved 
some of the pain of lower oil
prices, giving Russian energy firms and the 
government extra rubles for every dollar’s worth of foreign oil sales.

Searching for growth

In a feisty state-of-the-nation speech on Dec. 4, Putin acknowledged the 
challenges facing the economy, and offered a raft of measures in response. He 
pledged to reduce intrusive government inspections on small businesses, 
establish two-year tax holidays for new small businesses and initiate a full 
amnesty for Russians who return capital to the country from abroad.

Russian Central Bank raises key lending rate to 17 percent 
<http://rbth.com/news/2014/12/16/russian_central_bank_raises_key_lending_rate_to_17_percent_42275.html>
  

“The period ahead will be complex and difficult,” Putin said. “We must escape 
the trap of zero-level growth and achieve an above-average global growth rate 
within the next three to four years.”
Putin charged officials to work to deter currency speculators from driving down 
the ruble.

“I’d like to ask the Bank of Russia and the government to carry out tough and 
concerted actions to discourage the so-called speculators from playing on 
fluctuations of the Russian currency,” Putin said. “The authorities know who 
these speculators are. We have the proper instruments of influence, and the 
time is ripe to use them.”

However, Putin also noted that a weaker ruble would also help make Russian 
goods more competitive, and called on Russian producers to use the opportunity 
to seize market share from foreign competitors over the next few years.


Read more: Sechin calls rumors on Rosneft's participation in ruble's crash 
<http://rbth.com/news/2014/12/16/sechin_calls_rumors_on_rosnefts_participation_in_rubles_crash_42289.html>
 >>> 



Source: Russia Beyond the Headlines - 
http://rbth.com/business/2014/12/16/russian_officials_predict_recession_in_2015_42283.html)

 

-- 
Ову поруку сте добили зато што сте пријављени на Google групу „SERBIAN NEWS 
NETWORK“.
Да бисте отказали пријаву у ову групу и престали да примате имејлове од ње, 
пошаљите имејл на [email protected].
Да бисте постављали у овој групи, пошаљите е-поруку на [email protected].
Посетите ову групу на http://groups.google.com/group/senet.
За више опција посетите https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to