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Claims that the Russian Economy Was Sanctions-Proof Prove Greatly Exaggerated

Ashley Jarrett

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Russia’s President Vladimir Putin holds a news conference after the U.S.-Russia summit with U.S. President Joe Biden in Geneva, Switzerland, June 16, 2021.
(Denis Balibouse/Reuters)

The New York Times, back on February 5: “Over the past several years, Mr. Putin, Russia’s president, has restructured his country’s economy for the specific purpose of withstanding Western financial pressure.”

Clearly, the Russian economy wasn’t as immune to financial pressure as Putin thought; as laid out in today’s Morning Jolt, the ruble is collapsing, the Moscow stock market remains closed, Russians are lining up at ATMs to withdraw cash, and banks are likely to go under.

Sure, Russia’s got reserves and can still export oil and gas, but losing the ability to move any money in and out of the country suddenly complicates life for Russians in a million ways, large and small. This morning, ING reports, “apparently, credit card payments have already started to bounce in Russia over the weekend.” Importers can’t pay their suppliers; exporters can’t get paid from their customers, or at least not easily. Inflation is already terrible, so printing more rubles will just make the problem worse. The standard of living for the average Russian is about to crash, with imports unavailable, mass layoffs, banks collapsing, savings disappearing, and obtaining loans much more difficult because of much higher interest rates.

Then again, if Vladimir Putin vastly overestimated his country’s ability to withstand international economic pressure, it isn’t the only giant miscalculation he made lately.


Formerly an online tech and science reporter at The Sun Online, Ashley stepped up to the mantle of technology reporter at the Daily Telegraph late last year. She writes about everything from drones, web security and cryptocurrency to social media apps, like Facebook and Spotify, and technology brands including Apple and Toshiba.

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