Quagmire or catastrophe
Experts are once again predicting the imminent collapse of the Russian economy, but how likely is it to happen next year?

Since the start of the war in Ukraine, the Russian economy has been either slated as heading for total collapse or praised for its stability and resilience. But while many economists spoke of a large safety margin at the outset of 2024, pessimistic voices have grown louder as the year draws to a close.
Speculation about how deeply the economy is mired in issues that will “make 2025 a disaster” usually involves listing a number of symptoms, including the record-high key interest rate, inflation, and an overheating economy.
Measures that reduce Russia’s ability to export oil and gas, import goods, and make cross-border financial transactions will hit the economy the hardest.
Russia is repeating the path trodden by the Soviet Union, which effectively produced tanks and missiles — though even these now need Chinese or even Western electronics — but couldn’t build cars or computers.
While Russia is mass-producing tanks and scrabbling around the world for spare aeroplane parts, it risks missing another technological leap forward.


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Scraping the barrel
The Kremlin is facing a massive budget deficit due to the low cost of Russian crude oil

US investment fund attempts to recoup tsarist-era debt using frozen Russian assets

EU lowers price cap on Russian oil as shadow fleet continues to flout international sanctions
Report calls out EU ‘complicity’ in funding Kremlin war machine as imports of Russian LNG rise

Russian-held Telegram bonds worth $500 million frozen due to Western sanctions
Double whammy
Could sanctions and drone strikes lead to the collapse of Russian oil production and end its funding of the Kremlin’s war machine?



