Russia’s economy is ‘sputtering,’ and Putin’s wartime spending model has pushed the country to an ‘economic, political, and military abyss’
For years, Vladimir Putin has had a convincing rebuttal to anyone who thought Western sanctions would bring his country to its knees. In the four years since Russia invaded Ukraine, GDP has stayed mostly in the green, its unemployment rate has declined, and average wages have skyrocketed. Even inflation has moderated sharply, after soaring to double digits in 2023. Putin has waved those figures at Western critics as proof that sanctions have failed to cripple Russia’s booming wartime economy. China, one of Russia’s few remaining major trading partners, has even studied Putin’s model as a blueprint for sanctions-proofing its own economy, in the event Beijing’s stance towards Taiwan turns aggressive enough to trigger Western penalties of its own. But Putin’s success story is starting to show cracks. Russia’s economy has become dominated by the war effort, with the country’s industrial and technological base increasingly dedicated to serving needs on the front lines. But now, with the Russian army running into a standstill in Ukraine and military costs mounting, Putin’s economy stands at a crossroads, according to a research brief published Wednesday by the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a think tank in Washington D.C. Russia is still able to count on a vast pool of human labor and its “shadow fleet” array of oil tankers evading sanctions to bring in revenue from fuel sales, according to the researchers. But the costs of maintaining the status quo are mounting for Putin, as the wartime economy he built grows increasingly strained. “Everyday Russians are suffering from a sputtering economy,” the CSIS researchers wrote. “Russia’s economy is in distress, and Russia’s wartime spending may be increasingly untenable. The moment is ripe for a pressure campaign that pushes the Russian economy toward exhaustion.” Russia’s steroid economy is wearing off The report first compiled the numbers detailing Russia’s battlefield losses. Since the war began, as many as 4