KEY POINTS
  • Moscow is working to recalibrate its economy in the face of a barrage of international sanctions imposed by Western powers in response to the war.
  • The Russian economy shrunk by 4% year-on-year over the second quarter, although this was less sharp than the 5% expected by analysts.
  • Although many economists are focusing on the long-term structural threats to the Russian economy – which the government and central bank are scrambling to counter – the more immediate collapse predicted by some has not come to fruition.
Russian President Vladimir Putin meets with head of Federal Financial Monitoring Service (Rosfinmonitoring) Yury Chikhanchin at the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia June 27, 2022.

Russia's economy contracted in the second quarter – the first full three months since the country's invasion of Ukraine – and economists are divided over whether it can continue to weather the onslaught of international sanctions in the long term.

The Russian economy shrunk by 4% year-on-year over the second quarter, although this was less sharp than the 5% expected by analysts. The Central Bank of Russia expects the downturn to deepen in the quarters ahead, reaching its lowest point in the first half of 2023.