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The Russian economy risked going into recession from early 2014, mainly due to falling oil prices, sanctions, and the subsequent capital flight. [143] While in 2014 GDP growth remained positive at 0.6%, [144] in 2015 the Russian economy shrunk by 3.7% and was expected to shrink further in 2016. [145]
Russia's latest economic data showed it had a strong 2024 and decade-high budget revenues in December. But economists say they aren't convinced. Economists are questioning Russia's economic data ...
This article is a list of Russian federal subjects by Gross regional domestic product (GRDP). Top 10 Russian federal subjects by largest GDP Russian GDP divided into 2 equal parts. 50% of Russian economy is concentrated in only 10% of Russian area or only 2 federal districts (which together contain nearly half of Russia's population).
Tyumen Oblast has largest GRDP per capita in Russia of around US$ 49,000 while Ingushetia has lowest of around US$ 2,000. [1] In 2022, Moscow GRDP per capita reached US$ 30,000 while Saint Petersburg stood at US$ 27,000. [1] Federal subjects of Russia by GRDP per capita in EUR (2021) Federal subjects of Russia by GRDP per capita in RUB (2022) [1]
The inflationary pressures on the Russian economy remain high, despite the Russian Central Bank setting an interest rate of 18%. An annualized rate of price increases from May to July stands at 10 ...
Russia's economy rebounded sharply from a slump in 2022, annual data will show on Wednesday, but the growth relies heavily on state-funded arms and ammunition production and masks problems that ...
This is a list of Russian federal districts by GDP measures counted in PPP or Nominal. The Central Federal District, North Caucasian Federal District, Northwestern Federal District, Southern Federal District and the Volga Federal District are counted for the European part of Russia, while the Far Eastern Federal District, Siberian Federal District and Ural Federal District are counted for the ...
According to official Russian data, in 1994 the national gross domestic product (GDP) was 604 trillion rubles (about US$207 billion according to the 1994 exchange rate), or about 4% of the United States GDP for that year. But this figure underestimates the size of the Russian economy.