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Russia's pension system is paid either through employers, who take 22% of the payroll to accommodate for costs of pensions, by individuals themselves, who pay around 14,000 Rubles (218 USD) per month towards pensions on a maximum of 512,000 rubles (US$7,974) per year, or by regional governments who directly pay into the pension funds of their ...
Annual percentage GDP growth rate of Russia, 2008–2017 Yearly inflation in Russia since 2008 Capital outflow from Russia, billions of USD. The financial crisis in Russia in 2017 (from 2014) [1] [2] was the result of the sharp devaluation of the Russian rouble beginning in the second half of 2014.
USD / RUB exchange rate 1994–2023 EUR / RUB exchange rate. The first Russian ruble (RUR) introduced in January 1992 depreciated significantly versus the US dollar from US$1 = 125 RUR to around US$1 = 6,000 RUR (or 6 RUB) when it was redenominated in January 1998. The new ruble then depreciated rapidly in its first year to US$1 = 20 RUB before ...
The ruble that Elvira Nabiullina manages crashed through the psychological support of 100 to the U.S. dollar and on Monday is now worth less than a penny, the first time since March 23 of last year.
Ratings agencies have said that payment in rubles on dollar bonds would put Russia in a technical default. Russia says it sent $650 million bond payment in rubles after US Treasury blocked dollar ...
In 2023, the Russian finance minister stated that the planned surplus of 1.4 trillion rubles from the 2022 budget had become a 3.3 trillion ruble deficit over the same period. [6] In addition, the Russian finance minister reported in April that the deficit in the first quarter of 2023 was 2.4 trillion against the expected yearly surplus of 0.4 ...
Russia has fined Google an eye-popping 20 undecillion rubles ($2.5 decillion) for removing Russian state-run and government YouTube channels in the wake of the country’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
Since 1992, the Bank of Russia began to buy and sell foreign currency on the foreign exchange market created by it, establish and publish the official exchange rates of foreign currencies against the ruble. In 2006 capital controls mandate by the RCB began to ease, as confidence in the ruble mounted from the depths of the 1990s. [13]