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Why Russia’s Economy Is Crumbling Under Sanctions, War Costs, and Mass Exodus of Talent

22/06/2025
12h
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ByLuna Moretti
Why Russia’s Economy Is Crumbling Under Sanctions, War Costs, and Mass Exodus of Talent
Why Russia’s Economy Is Crumbling Under Sanctions, War Costs, and Mass Exodus of Talent FILE|Courtesy

A Quick Recap of This Story

    • Western sanctions have crippled exports, finance, and manufacturing.

    • War spending dominates the federal budget, crowding out civilian needs.

    • Russia faces a massive brain drain as skilled workers flee.

    • The ruble is volatile, and inflation is eating into household incomes.

    • Russia has no alternative growth sectors to replace oil and gas.

 

 

Sanctions Are Strangling Key Sectors

 

 

Western sanctions have slammed Russia’s economy. They’ve restricted access to global markets, frozen assets abroad, and blocked technology imports. Oil and gas exports, which once kept the economy afloat, now bring in less revenue due to forced discounts and lost buyers.

 

 

 

 

Russia can’t rely on its old trade routes. Sanctions have isolated its banking systems, frozen international partnerships, and triggered a mass exit of global firms. This economic isolation is not temporary—it’s rewriting Russia’s position in global trade permanently.

 

 

 

 

War Spending Is Bleeding the Budget

 

 

The Ukraine war is draining state resources. Over a third of Russia’s national budget now goes directly to military operations, weapons production, and veterans’ payments. That kind of spending crowds out healthcare, education, and infrastructure.

 

 

 

 

The problem? War spending doesn’t create sustainable growth. It creates a short-lived economic buzz followed by deeper financial holes. Long-term development is being sacrificed for short-term military gain.

 

 

 

 

The Workforce Is Shrinking and Fleeing

 

 

 

Russia’s most productive citizens are disappearing. Military conscription, war deaths, and mass emigration have gutted the workforce. Professionals in tech, finance, and science are leaving the country, taking their skills and tax contributions with them.

 

 

 

This isn't just a labor shortage. It's a crisis. Fewer workers mean less productivity, weaker businesses, and fewer innovations. Russia is growing older and more desperate, with a collapsing middle class and no plan to stop the outflow.

 

 

 

 

The Ruble Is Weak and Unreliable

 

 

The ruble has lost value and trust. With limited foreign reserves and collapsing investor confidence, Russia's central bank has struggled to stabilize its currency. Inflation is rising sharply, and imported goods have become unaffordable or unavailable.

 

 

 

 

For Russian families, this means savings are melting, prices are surging, and wages aren't keeping up. The financial pain is spreading far beyond elites and hitting ordinary citizens.

 

 

 

 

No Growth Drivers Left in the Economy

 

 

Russia’s economy was never diversified. It depended on oil and gas while ignoring innovation. Now, even energy revenues are falling. Domestic production is stalled, foreign investment is gone, and tourism is dead.

 

 

 

Without a pivot to new industries, Russia is stuck in economic quicksand. The government is pumping cash to fake normalcy, but inflation and weak output tell a different story. There’s no clear path forward.

 

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