SSRN Id4167193
SSRN Id4167193
SSRN Id4167193
Russian Economy
Measures of Current Economic Activity and Economic Outlook Point to
Devastating Impact on Russia
Jeffrey A. Sonnenfeld
Founder & President, Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute
Senior Associate Dean, Lester Crown Professor of Management Practice, Yale School of Management
Steven Tian
Director of Research, Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute
Yale University
Franek Sokolowski
Research Fellow in Business & Economics, Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute
Yale University
Michal Wyrebkowski
Research Assistant in Energy, Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute
University of Pennsylvania, Wharton Business School
Mateusz Kasprowicz
Research Assistant, Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute
Warsaw School of Economics
August 2022
With Research Assistance from Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute Researchers:
Wiktor Babinski; Yale Graduate School of Arts and Sciences and London School of Economics
Yash Bhansali; Goldman Sachs
Forrest Michael Bomann; Columbia University
Michal Boron; Humboldt University
Katie Burke; Johns Hopkins University
Dr. Adriana Coleska; MD Yale School of Medicine
Stephen Henriques; McKinsey & Co.
Georgia Hirsty; Frailty Myths and Yale School of Management
Andrew Kaiser; Publicis Sapient
Cate Littlefield; PepsiCo
Camillo Padulli; Yale University
Ryan Vakil; Yale University
Israel Yolou; Big Data Post-Bac, Yale University
Steven Zaslavsky; Moelis & Company
https://yale.box.com/s/7f6agg5ezscj234kahx35lil04udqgeo
https://som.yale.edu/story/2022/over-1000-companies-have-curtailed-
operations-russia-some-remain
That these misunderstandings persist is not surprising. Since the invasion, the Kremlin’s
economic releases have become increasingly cherry-picked, selectively tossing out
unfavorable metrics while releasing only those that are more favorable. These Putin-selected
statistics are then carelessly trumpeted across media and used by reams of well-meaning but
careless experts in building out forecasts which are excessively, unrealistically favorable to
the Kremlin – which we explain further in Section I of this paper.
Our team of experts, using Russian language and unconventional data sources including high
frequency consumer data, cross-channel checks, releases from Russia’s international trade
partners, and data mining of complex shipping data, have released one of the first
comprehensive economic analyses measuring Russian current economic activity five months
into the invasion, and assessing Russia’s economic outlook.
From our analysis, it becomes clear: business retreats and sanctions are crippling the Russian
economy, in the short-term, and the long-term. We tackle a wide range of common
misperceptions – and shed light on what is actually going on inside Russia, including:
- Despite some lingering supply chain leakiness, Russian imports have largely
collapsed, and the country faces stark challenges securing crucial inputs, parts, and
technology from hesitant trade partners, leading to widespread supply shortages
within its domestic economy – as we explain further in Section III of this paper.
- As a result of the business retreat, Russia has lost companies representing ~40% of its
GDP, reversing nearly all of three decades’ worth of foreign investment and
buttressing unprecedented simultaneous capital and population flight in a mass
exodus of Russia’s economic base – as we explain further in Section V of this paper.
- Looking ahead, there is no path out of economic oblivion for Russia as long as the
allied countries remain unified in maintaining and increasing sanctions pressure
against Russia – as we explain further in Section VIII of this paper.
Looking ahead, there is no path out of economic oblivion for Russia as long as the allied
countries remain unified in maintaining and increasing sanctions pressure against Russia, and
The Kyiv School of Economics and McFaul-Yermak Working Group have led the way in
proposing additional sanctions measures.
Many of the excessively sanguine Russian economic analyses, forecasts, and projections which
have proliferated in recent months share a crucial methodological flaw: these analyses draw most,
if not all of their underlying evidence from periodic economic releases by the Russian government
itself, without cross-checking or verification of data integrity. The most frequently cited Kremlin
sources include the Russian Federal Service for State Statistics, more commonly known as Rosstat;
the Bank of Russia, and data releases by the Ministries of Energy, Economy and Finance.
While numbers released by the Kremlin have long been held by the economic community to be
largely if not always credible, there are three significant, underappreciated considerations which
severely strain the integrity of the Kremlin’s statistics since the outset of the invasion of this year.
Economists and analysts must thus be extra careful about citing official Kremlin statistics and
cross-verifying the integrity of these statistics wherever possible.
First, the Kremlin’s economic releases are becoming increasingly cherry-picked; partial, and
incomplete, selectively tossing out unfavorable statistics while keeping favorable statistics. The
Russian government is no longer disclosing certain economic indicators which prior to the war
were updated on a monthly basis, including all foreign trade data, including those relating to
exports and imports, particularly with Europe; oil and gas monthly output data; commodity export
quantities; capital inflows and outflows; financial statements of major companies, which used to
be released on a mandatory basis by companies themselves; central bank monetary base data;
foreign direct investment data; and lending and loan origination data, and other data related to the
availability of credit. Even Rosaviatsiya, the federal air transport agency, abruptly ceased
publishing data on airline and airport passenger volumes. As a measure of comparison, prior to the
war, the only economic data which have historically been classified and quarantined by the Russian
government are sensitive metrics related to the trade of military goods, aircraft, and nuclear
materials.
Second, even those favorable statistics which are released are questionable if not downright
dubious when measured against cross-channel checks, verification against alternative benchmarks
and given the political pressure the Kremlin has exerted to corrupt statistical integrity. Indeed, the
Kremlin has a long history of fudging official economic statistics, even prior to the invasion. Putin
has on several occasions shunted aside heads of Rosstat who produced economic statistics which
were not to his liking, and he personally transferred control of the agency to political appointees
at the Economic Ministry, depriving the agency of its prior status as an independent branch of
government free from political influence. Outside observers ranging from international
organizations to foreign investors regularly sound alarm bells over “concerns about the reliability
and consistency” of the Kremlin’s economic releases, especially given the propensity of Kremlin
economists for “switching to new methodologies” with alarming frequency – many instances of
Third, and as mentioned briefly previously, almost all rosy projections and forecasts are
irrationally extrapolating economic releases from the early days of the post-invasion period, when
sanctions and the business retreat had not taken full effect, rather than the most recent, up-to-date
numbers from recent weeks and months – partially due to the fact the Kremlin stopped releasing
updated numbers, constraining the availability of datasets for economic researchers to draw upon.
For example, many alarming forecasts projecting strong revenue from energy exports were based
on the last available official export data from March, even though many business withdrawals and
sanctions on energy had not yet taken effect, with orders placed prior to the invasion still being
delivered.
Take, as one instance of many, one widely cited study by Bloomberg decrying Russia’s surge in
revenue from energy exports. The authors wrote: “even with some countries halting or phasing out
energy purchases, Russia’s oil-and-gas revenue will be about $285 billion this year, according to
estimates from Bloomberg Economics based on Economy Ministry projections. That would
exceed the 2021 figure by more than one-fifth”. No doubt, Russia has continued to draw significant
revenue from energy exports – a complex topic which we analyze in-depth in the sections below.
This lack of current, reliable data poses a severe obstacle to accurate economic forecasting. It is
almost certain that these oil and gas revenues have dropped even further since May and June for
the reasons laid out in the ”Commodity Exports” section, but the Kremlin’s refusal to release data
makes it impossible for forecasters to work off a current set of numbers. The economic projections
that are done and released publicly, therefore, are unfortunately often based on historic, early-war
period statistics which are already outdated and irrelevant.
Our methodology is thus different, avoiding these common pitfalls and errors. We draw from a
wider variety and range of sources in our comprehensive analysis, not only taking Rosstat’s word
The findings of our comprehensive economic analysis of Russia are powerful and indisputable:
not only have sanctions and the business retreat worked, they have thoroughly crippled the Russian
economy at every level. Our analysis simultaneously highlights and reinforces the work of the
McFaul-Yermak working group on sanctions in emphasizing some areas which require further
policy and business action to further immobilize Russia’s war-making and economic capabilities.
No doubt, certain European energy companies, such as TotalEnergies, can and must do more to
10
Although these are genuine, crucial challenges, which we further highlight in Section 8 of this
working paper; there is simultaneously widespread under-appreciation of the damage already
wrought to Russia’s status as a leading commodity exporter. A close macroeconomic analysis of
measures of current economic activity demonstrates that under the surface, Russia’s commodity
exports are already under severe strain – which has been far more devastating to Russia than to the
west – across the entire commodity complex, including but not limited to energy revenues derived
from oil and gas exports.
First, contrary to widespread alarmism over the adverse impact of the Russia-Ukraine war on
global commodity prices, the importance of commodity exports to Russia far exceeds the
importance of Russian commodity exports to the rest of the world. Russia’s total export earnings
consist overwhelmingly of revenue derived from commodities and raw materials; these export
earnings make up well over half of Russia’s total government budget in most years – and
presumably, an even larger proportion now, though it is impossible to say for sure since the
Kremlin has suspended publication of a range of unfavorable financial and economic data since
the start of the invasion. This revenue includes not only direct revenue from oil & gas exports
which makes its way into the Kremlin’s coffers, but also indirect sources such as taxes paid by
employees that work in commodities-related industries, taxes paid by companies in commodities-
related industries and which provide services to commodities-related industries, and much more.
On the flip side, of each of the major commodities Russia exports, Russian supply is no more than
10% at most of the global market in the case of certain energy categories, and low single-digits in
the case of most metals and foodstuffs as shown below, according to proprietary estimates by
economic researchers at Morgan Stanley. While the impact is not evenly geographically distributed
– given, for example, more heavy reliance by Europe on Russian energy flows (but less than
conventionally appreciated, as explained below) – on the whole, this has allowed most major
multinational companies to seamless pivot away from purchasing Russian exports without
disrupting sourcing of supply. Even companies which previously relied heavily on Russian
11
It follows naturally that the key characteristic of the export relationships that Russia has entered
with its hitherto global partners, primarily European countries, is asymmetric interdependence. In
short, Russia needs world markets as an outlet for its commodity exports far more than the world
needs Russian commodity supplies. This is true not only across the entire commodity complex
writ large, but on each specific commodity Russia exports as well. This is not to say that the
transition away from Russian commodities has been painless for the west – far from it. As recent
headlines bear out, the necessity of Europe cutting back on power usage while diversifying energy
supply sources has created challenging political and economic ramifications. But the evidence
clearly shows that the impact has been asymmetric: for every incremental pain inflicted on the
west by pivoting away from Russian commodities, the damage wrought to Russia is far in excess.
This is a plain expression of a more complex academic framework often used by trade economists.
In the framework of asymmetric interdependence – a framework invoked previously as a
conceptualization of Russia’s role in provoking the 2008 energy crisis – there are two key factors
to consider – 1) each side’s short-term sensitivity to price or supply shocks; and 2) overall strategic
12
In the sections below, we examine certain commodity classes as case studies of why Russia’s
strategic positioning as a commodity exporter has deteriorated far beyond what is conventionally
appreciated.
Natural Gas
One crucial commodity where – contrary to misleading narratives – Russia is far more dependent
on Europe than Europe is on Russia is natural gas. At the same time, natural gas captures the
difficult trade-offs and short-term price pain that western countries must bear in the war against
Russia – even as natural gas highlights the fact Russia’s economic pain and suffering far outweighs
that borne by the rest of the world.
To be sure, the complexities inherent to natural gas’ role in the Russia-Ukraine conflict require
some crucial background and historical context.
13
Although the threat of Russian energy blackmail was initially seen as minimal, nonetheless, the
countries were never on equal footing – in the early 1990s, Ukrainian President Leonid Kravchuk
considered giving up naval bases in the Black Sea, some Ukrainian gas assets and all Ukrainian
nuclear warheads to Russia in exchange for gas debt forgiveness. Furthermore, while Russia still
depended substantially on Ukrainian gas transit capacities, Russia intentionally reduced its reliance
over time over the course of the 1990s and 2000s, providing it with more leeway in leveraging gas
to advance national interests – as explored below in further detail. Paired with the establishment
of the Stabilization Fund of the Russian Federation in 2004 and its vast financial reserves (about
$155 billion in 2008), these developments empowered Russia sufficiently to allow for its
prolonged interventions in the Ukrainian gas market in the winter of 2008/2009, with Russia
putting into practice a strategy devised as the Soviet Union was breaking apart – the famed Falin-
Kvitsinky doctrine, which endeavored to substitute military influence in the former Warsaw Pact
countries with economic pressure in the event of non-compliance, based on the oil and gas
dependence of these countries on Russia.
However, following the scarring experience of the winter gas crisis of 2008/2009, the European
Union purposefully took steps to decrease its potential vulnerability to future Russian energy
interventions. In the Third Energy Package, the European Commission required unbundling of the
transmission network from integrated energy companies, which blocked, inter alia, the kick-off of
the Nord Stream 2 project. Furthermore, reverse-flow capabilities were added to the gas pipelines;
new LNG terminals and interconnectors were built into the network. Added regasification capacity
at LNG terminals in Klaidepa and Swinoujscie allowed countries such as Lithuania and Poland to
diversify their energy sources while warding off Russian energy blackmail by carrying out a
credible threat of importing natural gas from elsewhere.
Despite some progress, Europe’s move to diversify away from Russian gas was painfully
14
One of the key factors decreasing Russian vulnerability in its asymmetric interdependence
relationship with Europe – while lessening Russia’s dependence on legacy pipelines flowing
through Ukraine – was the construction of Nord Stream 1 (the first line in 2011, the second in
2012) with a total capacity of 55 bcm, which allowed Russia to directly supply Germany and other
western European countries with Russian piped gas, bypassing Ukraine completely. The building
of Nord Stream 2, which would have added 55bcm of gas transport capacity had it opened,
combined with other routes of gas transport such as TurkStream (31.5 bcm) would have allowed
Russia to further bypass the Ukrainian Gas Transport System (GTS) as an export route to the
European Union. The maximum annual capacity of the Ukrainian GTS is 146 bcm, roughly
equivalent to all other Russia-EU export routes combined. Gazprom’s increased transmission of
gas via Nord Stream 1 over the last decade provided a meaningful platform through which Russia
could both hand out petrocarrots and petrosticks while decreasing its legacy reliance on Ukraine
for ensuring the continuity of Russian gas exports.
To be sure, the majority of European countries were not oblivious to the dangers of increasing
Russian gas imports over the last decade through Nord Stream 1. Even though Russian gas was
intended to be only a transitory, temporary bridge to a more energy-independent future, in a
shorter-term time horizon, many experts took it as an excuse for inaction or lack of political will.
Taking Germany as an example, this underlying “transitory” intention is illustrated by the core
tenet of Germany’s Energiewende – the idea that natural gas should serve as a bridge fuel and
stabilizer of the inherently intermittent renewable-based energy grid – and a practical realization
of the perennial German foreign policy principle of Wandel durch Handel – (political) change
coming through trade. The German energy transition was built on the assumption of cheap Russian
natural gas as a transitionary fuel, which together with lignite coal could fill the gap created by a
nuclear phase-out and pave the way for the rising role of wind and solar power. Natural gas
accounted for 15.3% of German electricity generation in 2021, and 32% of the total gas
supply hailed from Russia.
Germany’s situation, which was representative of an erroneous belief that Russian gas could
provide stability and security of supply as a stopgap measure if nothing else, conveniently turned
a blind eye to Russia’s previous weaponization of energy to advance its national interests. But
Germany is not necessarily representative of the rest of Europe – in short, countries have already
15
Despite this asymmetry, the throttling back of Russian gas to Europe post-invasion has not been
painless for Europe. But the damage wrought by a rapid decoupling from Russian gas imports is
more an issue of relative sensitivity of European countries to short-term, transitory supply and
price shocks rather than their long-term strategic vulnerability as it is for Russia, as explained
below. Furthermore, Europe’s challenges are largely solvable and mitigatable through short-term
political solutions, as explained below.
Despite Europe’s long-term plans to move away from natural gas in favor of renewables, there is
no disputing that the energy transition is not taking place at a pace fast enough for Europe to
completely reduce natural gas consumption in the short-term, necessitating both onboarding of
alternative natural gas supplies as well as the ramp-up of renewables efforts for Europe while
simultaneously conserving power usage in the short-term. On the renewables front, shortening the
certification period of wind projects from the current seven years and a building up of FSRU
capacity could help prepare Europe for the next winter, in addition to adding battery storage
capacity and restoring nuclear power as a grid stabilizer, and reverting to coal as a temporary
stopgap. These measures draw from the 10-point action plan laid out by the International Energy
Agency for reducing the European Union’s reliance on Russian natural gas in the short-term,
proposing a range of necessary solutions covering alternative gas supplies as well as power and
end-use sectors, requiring increased coordination across countries and industries – lest Europe
finds itself facing harsh gas rationing next winter.
A core tenet of the plan is replacing the lost Russian gas supply with a mix of EU natural gas
production, piped imports from Azerbaijan and Norway and even more importantly LNG imports
from Qatar, Algeria, and the United States. The latter has already been dubbed the “Berlin Gas
Lift” by Baker Institute energy experts. Indeed, American LNG flows to Europe have already
overtaken Russian piped gas imports - in June, Russia piped just 4.5bcm to Europe, a third of what
it did in early 2021, while US LNG to Europe represented 5.5 bcm in the same period. A number
of additional measures can increase LNG flows to Europe in the short-term, anchored around an
16
Timely enhanced procurement of LNG can coincide with an introduction of minimum gas storage
obligations. Based on IEA analysis, fill levels of about 90% would be required to provide enough
leeway for the winter heating season, with some cushion to spare. Regional coordination of gas
procurement and storage and a harmonized approach across EU member states to gas supply and
inventory levels could ensure optimal capacity allocation across Europe and beyond and boost the
resilience of the grid, which could be otherwise faced with local outages or worst case scenario –
localized blackouts. Moreover, even considering the political difficulties inherent to the formation
of a gas-buying cartel, the EU Commission could expedite its work on the newly announced joint
purchasing mechanism – which, even if unlikely to be implemented in time for this winter, could
buttress European gas supply for future winters.
Discontinuing long-term gas contracts with Gazprom as they expire would further lower the
contractual minimum take-or-pay for Russian natural gas imports, and intensify Europe’s
diversification effort. This is, of course, recognizing that Gazprom itself is not a regular energy
giant which plays by the rules – rather, it has been a device of the Kremlin’s political influence
and has shown a willingness to ignore contractual obligations with European countries already,
17
In sum, the challenge to the European energy security and economy at large is real, but
manageable. A complete implementation by Europe of the IEA’s diversification plan could result
in a total reduction of well over half of Russian gas imports (80 bcm) while still maintaining a
comparable, if not lower, level of greenhouse gas emissions and preserving energy supply, hence
not jeopardizing the EU climate targets while alleviating energy security concerns.
Russia’s problems on the natural gas front, unlike Europe’s, are deeply ingrained in long-term
challenges within its economic and political structure, not transitory in nature, and are ultimately
unsolvable. Russia is highly vulnerable in several domains related to its natural gas exports – the
very structure of its commodity-based economy, supply chains, technology, and ultimately its
reputation as a credible trade partner which fulfills its delivery contracts as a commodity supplier
– all of which are not only framed by but exacerbated by Russia’s deteriorating geopolitical
positioning.
First, contrary to Putin’s illusions that Russia can return to a Soviet-era state of economic self-
sufficiency, the Russian economy has become highly globalized over the past three decades with
significant reliance on western technology and international supply chains – and is thus more
vulnerable to external shocks and disruptions. The economy of Russia during the Soviet era was
largely and authentically autarkic – even though its trade grew from 10% of GDP in the 1950s to
about 25% of GDP in the 1980s, this trade was largely done with its Comecon satellites through
highly unequal, politicized trade deals designed to advance the interests of the Soviet Union rather
than the Russian economy.
This stands in stark contrast to three decades’ worth of economic development and opening to the
west after the end of the Cold War. The post-Soviet Russian growth model relied heavily on raw
commodity exports with low value added across value chains, but was dependent on western
technology for extraction and on global supply chains for purchases – with the share of trade in
goods and services in the GDP of Russia reaching approximately 46.1 percent in 2020.
Despite these differences, Putin is not entirely wrong – the present-day Russian economy does
maintain some similarities to the Soviet-era economy, but in all the wrong ways. For example, one
18
Another similarity underlying the modern Russian economy and the Soviet era economy – and
which further highlights the structural weakness and lack of depth of the Russian economy – is the
fact that extractive institutions persist. The so-called power vertical is a top-down political system
which naturally follows from a concentration of economic power in the oil and gas sector, which
provides more than half of the Russian budget revenue each year – reflected by the sprawling
oligarchic bureaucracy which tries to reap as much oil and gas rent as feasibly possible. Such a
power arrangement highly discourages diversification of economic growth – contributing to Dutch
disease for the past fifteen years; as windfall profits from oil and gas grew, the real exchange rate
rose, and manufacturing competitiveness was reduced. Ultimately, the only two sectors that remain
healthy and prolific in an economy struck by a Dutch disease are oil and gas, and to a lesser extent,
servicers of those industries.
While a contributing factor, Russia’s failure to develop an economy with more breadth across
industries cannot be explained by a resource curse alone; and is closely related to the highly corrupt
institutional arrangement in Russia. Nowhere is this more obvious than in the natural gas sector.
Within natural gas, the Russian political economy encouraged the creation of a highly corrupt and
inefficient duopoly of Gazprom – the state-owned exporter of piped natural gas, derived from the
legacy Soviet gas ministry; and Novatek – an oligarch-controlled nascent LNG exporter. The
degree of bribery and value-extraction is legendary even by Russian standards, with Gazprom CEO
Alexey Miller’s son-in-law managing two trillion dollars' worth of government procurements and
co-owning a penthouse worth about 800 million US dollars. The CEO himself got one of the largest
bribes in Russian history – a rather dubious distinction – in the form of a palace built for him by
one of the contractors of Gazprom. Gazprom’s own role clearly veers toward buttressing the
political interests of the Kremlin rather than operating as a profit-making business, considering its
19
In short, the picture that emerges of the structure of the modern Russian economy is that of an
internally corrupt, western technology-dependent resource behemoth, which provides both the
revenue to sustain the Kremlin’s foibles while also saddling the country with a natural resource
curse accompanied by a self-serving oligarchic elite trying to reap as much economic value as
possible from the oil and gas sectors. But this is only the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the
insolvable, systemic problems facing the Russian economy.
Second, and relatedly, legacy commodity supply chains and trade patterns put Russia at a
significant strategic and economic disadvantage – especially considering piped gas is one of the
most non-fungible commodities. Europe has long been the destination of choice for Russian
commodity exports, particularly energy exports, and once again, these energy exports are far more
important to Russia than they are to Europe, with 83% of Russian natural gas exports received by
Europe, although Europe has a far more diversified supply base drawing 54% of its gas imports
from non-Russian sources, including LNG from Norway, Qatar and Algeria in addition to
significant domestic supply from sources such as the giant Groningen gas field in the Netherlands
as of 2021.1 And while most recent headlines have focused on Russia’s weaponization of gas in
turning off the spigots to European pipelines such as Nord Stream 1, there is some irony that
although Europe has understandably cried foul at these attempts to weaponize gas, the Russian
economy is hurt the most by shifting natural gas supply chains away from Europe, its primary
market. Piped gas exports are naturally sticky and require pipelines to transport – and relatively
more fungible LNG comprises only a small fraction of overall natural gas production for Russia.
Due to sanctions, the Kremlin is significantly decreasing its already minimal LNG export forecasts
– predicting that by 2026, LNG exports will be below 30.7 million tonnes per year. The Russian
Energy Ministry’s September 2021 forecast had previously assumed that export volumes would
1
One exception not shown on the chart is wheat – Russian exports represent ~20% of the global wheat market, but
Russian wheat is primarily exported to EM countries such as Turkey and Egypt rather than to Europe.
20
To mitigate lost European transports of gas, in a speech in the days following the invasion, Putin
doubled down on a much-ballyhooed “povorot na vostok”, or “pivot to the east”, declaring
“[Russia] must diversify exports. Let us assume that energy supplies to the West will continue
going down in the foreseeable future. Therefore, it is important to consolidate the trend of the past
few years: to redirect our exports gradually to the rapidly growing markets of the South and the
East.” This would be quite the drastic pivot, considering the 16.5 billion cubic meters of gas
exported by Russia to China last year represented less than 10% of the 170 billion cubic meters of
natural gas sent by Russia to the European market. When considering only piped gas, the share of
natural gas sent by Russia to China drops to only 3.5%.
Recent history has shown that Russian predictions of a general economic “pivot to China” can
reflect unrealistically sanguine assumptions. In 2014, when relatively moderate sanctions were
implemented after the Russian annexation of Crimea, Russia similarly expected Chinese
companies to buy Russian assets, support Russian companies financially, and share technology
and know-how – though none of this panned out. As we will analyze in Section III, Russia
represents a minor trade partner for China, whose #1 trade partner remains the United States, and
most Chinese companies cannot risk running afoul of US sanctions by dealing with sanctioned
Russian entities under the table. Furthermore, as a net oil and gas importer, Chinese energy
companies lack many of the needed upstream technologies to service and maintain the Russian oil
and gas sector from a technological standpoint.
From a logistical standpoint, the infrastructure challenges facing Russia’s “pivot to the east” on
natural gas are daunting on several fronts.
21
Second, and most importantly, there remains no interconnectivity, and thus no opportunity to
22
There have been prior attempts. The idea of a Trans-Siberian Pipeline was first blocked by China
in the aftermath of the annexation of Crimea, given both Chinese reticence to pay higher European
prices for gas as well as its doubts that Gazprom can fulfill the commitment to build the Altai
pipeline quickly and on-cost from both a technical and financial perspective. The hurdles are many
– after all, the Altai region, on both sides of the border, lacks the necessary basic infrastructure to
stand up a project of this magnitude, and is faraway from major Chinese population centers, which
means that CNPC would have to build an additional high-altitude pipeline at even greater cost in
addition to the Altai pipeline itself. The project is of questionable benefit to China to begin with;
not only can China exert greater leverage in negotiations with Russia when Russian supplies of
piped gas are non-fungible, but China has no deficit of proven and suspected gas reserves in
Xinjiang to develop for its own national benefit.
It is thus not surprising that even before the conflict in Ukraine started, Russian companies failed
to receive large-scale debt financing for oil and gas projects from Chinese capital markets – in
addition to western capital markets being largely off limits post-2014. The Chinese financial
system is designed mostly to provide credit to domestic businesses, entrepreneurs, and state-owned
companies, all of whom have little direct presence in the Russian oil and gas sectors. CCP and
government-designed financing mechanisms such as BRI provide financing to international
projects of national interest, but interestingly, very little BRI financing has flowed to Russia, and
the disinterest is apparently mutual, rooted in a long-simmering historical rivalry between China
and Russia.
23
Confrontation with the West has decreased Russia's leverage as a commodity exporter in its
relationship not only with China, but with other relatively minor partners in the former Soviet bloc
as well, such as the countries of Central Asia. Taking Kazakhstan as one example, there are already
many indicators of minor but increasing tension as Kazakhstan pivots away from Russia, starting
with symbolic gestures such as Kazakhstan’s shift to Latin script in 2021, Kazakhstan’s
24
Making matters worse for Russia, yet another hurdle to its pivot to Asia is the fact that from the
onset of its oil and gas exports, Russia has heavily relied on western technology and know-how.
The first natural gas deal with the Soviet Union in 1968 relied on the pipeline manufacturing
capacities of German and Austrian companies. This reliance has continued well into the present –
and Russia’s technical incompetence and reliance on the west is illustrated by the recent Nord
Stream 2 example, with western companies being the main builders of the controversial pipeline.
Initially, it was envisaged as a Joint Venture of Gazprom and five EU companies – Shell, E.ON,
OMV, Wintershall and ENGIE. The withdrawal of Dutch-Swiss company Allseas following the
implementation of Protecting Europe’s Energy Security Act (PEESA) put the entirety of the
project on halt, reflecting Russia’s technical incompetence: Russia lacked in highly complex
pipelay vessels, and it took Russia over a year to adapt its Akademik Cherskiy and Fortuna to
laying Nord Stream 2.
Similarly, the feasibility of Russian greenfield ventures in the Arctic has also been called into
question without the continuity of western companies’ support. Russia has to increasingly pivot
towards new greenfield gas fields in the Arctic, as the yields from Western Siberian brownfields
drop, which begets numerous technical challenges. Extreme temperatures and ice loads require
specialized building techniques which can deal with the freezing temperature of cement, ice
accretion, and stabilization of structures in the permafrost. The developmental process of an oil or
gas field is no less difficult, particularly in these Arctic ventures, requiring drilling vessels that are
capable of drilling in cold and withstanding the ice load, not to mention the challenges associated
with attracting talented engineers to remote, inhospitable areas. Russia is already barred from using
the latest innovations in the field, with the newest drilling vessels having automated drilling control
systems and highest quality water purification systems which are now under sanction and
practically un-usable.
25
As such, when taken in totality, the outlook for Russia in lining up replacement buyers for its
depleting natural gas production beyond this coming winter seems highly unfavorable. Beyond
“the pivot to Asia” – which is troubled for the reasons laid out above – Russia retains few natural
markets for its gas exports. It is likely that Russian gas exports will fall significantly in the months
and years ahead not by Putin’s choice, despite his efforts to spin it as selectively “holding back
gas” to non-friendly countries, but because Putin will have no buyers for his gas. On the other
hand, his erstwhile trade partners will be able to easily line up replacement sources much easier
than Putin can line up replacement buyers for gas. Europe has already become an open playing
field for other LNG producers such as Qatar, the United States and Australia which can come in
and fill the void at great national profit, and they will essentially be guaranteed a stable place in
the European market, as long as gas remains a bridge fuel in the European energy transition. Given
the recent decision of the European Commission to label gas and nuclear (under some
preconditions) as sustainable energy sources, the other players in the LNG market are set to benefit
handsomely from Russia’s self-inflicted destruction of its export-oriented gas sector.
This leaves perhaps only Russia’s own domestic market for gas, but even the domestic Russian
energy market contains major question marks. By its own account, Russia is completely
unprepared for the energy transition. There exists an implicit premise in the narrative presented by
the leading Russian politicians and C-level executives of oil and gas companies that the “cure” to
climate change is potentially worse than the “disease” itself, mirroring Putin’s favorite talking
point lambasting the energy transition and climate efforts of other major nations, not only of the
26
Oil
Once more, the asymmetric relationship between Russia and its trade partners can be seen in the
oil markets – with Russia needing the revenue from oil exports far greater than the world needs
Russia’s oil – but to appreciate the full deterioration of Russia’s strategic oil positioning, some
background and historical context are necessary.
27
Oil exports are the foundation of Russia’s economy – much more so than gas. In 2021, revenue
from oil exports totaled 45 percent of Russia’s budget revenue, or about three times as much as
the revenue from natural gas exports. Independent oil producers represent less than 10% of
Russia’s oil production, and the role of the state and state-owned companies has grown
significantly over time from already high starting points, as Russia has aimed to switch away from
the declining West Siberian brownfields towards new projects on the Yamal peninsula and in the
Arctic. Of course, it is hardly surprising that the state would want to take an increasingly greater
role in oil – not only is Putin rumored to follow oil markets very closely, but Russia produces only
3% of the world’s GDP in total while being the third-largest producer of oil. In short it is oil and
gas that make Russia relevant in the world economy.
Historically, Putin himself rode the commodity super-cycle of the 2000s, and rising oil prices, to
increased power and prestige, on his way to establishing his grip over Russia more firmly. Oil
28
While Russians prospered from this oil windfall, Putin was able to consolidate and steadily
nationalize significant portions of the oil sector for his personal and political interest. He
incrementally removed problematic oil and gas oligarchs and other threats to his power with a mix
of hardball, extortions and assassinations. When Putin first took over, the state had lost significant
control over the oil and gas industry after the infamous and corrupt privatization of the oil and gas
sector under Boris Yeltsin in the 1990s, which minted a new wave of billionaire oligarchs. The
infamous nationalization of dissident oligarch Mikhail Khodorkovsky’s oil giant, Yukos, and his
subsequent sham political trial firmly re-established Putin’s grip over both the oil industry and
over Russia, but these episodes did not sever the ties between the Western oil majors and Russia.
The prospect of tapping into Russia’s oil wealth was just too attractive to pass, political turbulence
aside. ExxonMobil continued with its involvement in the Sakhalin-1 joint venture, similar to BP’s
joint venture with TNK; in 2005, Gazprom acquired Sibneft from Roman Abramovich, and in
2013 Rosneft acquired TNK-BP. In 2013, Rosneft had about 40% of the Russian oil market and
together with state-controlled Gazprom Neft and Slavneft, the state-controlled share of the market
totaled more than 50% - a quick recovery from the late 1990s, when state control over oil and gas
had dwindled.
With this newfound control over the oil sector, Putin started to use oil supply as an energy weapon
to reestablish its position in the so-called “near abroad”, similar to his use of gas in the afore-
mentioned 08-09 winter crisis with Ukraine. Oil, due to its fungibility and the degree to which it
is globalized, is more difficult to weaponize, but this did not deter Putin: indeed, the Russians tried
to leverage oil supply to gain sway over Latvia and Lithuania in the 2000s, in several little-
remembered but prescient episodes.
In the early 2000s, the Latvian port of Ventspils, which was connected to Transneft’s Russian
pipelines through a northern branch of the Druzhba pipeline, had been the single port exporting
the largest volumes of Russian oil and petroleum – 14.9 mln tons and 7 mln tons, respectively. In
2003, a delegation of the Russian Council of Businessmen and Entrepreneurs presented a de facto
ultimatum – there would be no more Russian oil exports through Ventspils unless the Latvian
government sells its share in the port which processed Russian oil. Despite rising oil prices and
29
These early instances of Russian weaponization of oil reflected Putin’s recklessness in engaging
in geopolitical adventures which threatened the future of the oil industry, and namely Russia’s
ability to continue oil development. Sanctions on the oil technology transfer industry were
introduced in 2014 in the aftermath of the Crimean incursion, severely inhibiting Russia’s long
term ability to develop its oil fields, particularly its unconventional oil reserves. Provisions of loans
and equity capital with maturity over 90 days (then reduced to 60 days) were limited for Rosneft,
Novatek, Transneft and Gazprom Neft by the United States, and similar measures were introduced
by the EU. Moreover, the provision of equipment used for oil extraction on the shelf, in the arctic
and in shale projects was banned. Sanctions also covered certain parts of drilling rigs, parts for
horizontal drilling, and Arctic-capable marine equipment – practically every component used by
the upstream exploration industry. Nevertheless, some international energy companies remained
in Russia (Conoco was a major exception) and continued legal development outside of the
sanctions’ scope, albeit at a slow and impeded clip. Partially as a result of this imposed
technological inferiority, Russia has no hydraulic fracking fleet, which means that it has to develop
more costly greenfield ventures in the Arctic to stay relevant on the global market and maintain its
oil production levels.
Even at a technologically inferior level, Russia continues on its oil development course, which has
been dubbed by some analysts as Russia’s Kodak moment, making only token efforts to diversify
and innovate.
A long term forecast for Russian oil production assumes a severe decline in greenfield ventures in
30
The consequences of the Russian oil fields’ decline are key for the future of Russia as an energy,
and specifically oil, superpower. Assuming the brownfield +4% decline scenario, which is highly
likely given a confluence of factors: lack of foreign capital and know-how, mounting technological
challenges when accessing Arctic deposits and the withdrawal of western energy companies, and
increased costs of tapping into new deposits, Russia could see a long-term oil production capacity
decrease to about 6 mb/d by the end of the decade. That is certainly a non-negligible amount, but
a far cry from Russia’s current production and former delusions of production growth. Russia’s
inability to grow oil production would prove crippling: not only would the country lose much of
its global geopolitical sway, but as the purchasing power of oil buyers vis-à-vis Russia increases,
and as its revenue plummets, as both the quantity produced and potentially the price of Ural crude
drops, at least relatively to other crudes, the Russian budget would face perennial budget shortfalls
and deficits each year – a surefire recipe for domestic discontent.
These long-term pessimistic forecasts for Russian oil production have largely been lost amidst
overwhelming focus in western countries on the rising price of oil and a supposed supply/demand
imbalance within oil markets in the short-term. No doubt, this is a crucial and important topic
demanding the attention of western policymakers and their constituencies – but a close analysis
reveals that conventional narratives surrounding a supply/demand imbalance in oil markets arising
from the loss of Russian oil are simply not true.
All things being equal, there may very well be additional potential production capacity among the
OPEC members, hitherto inhibited by political, security and technical reasons. If those obstacles
can be surmounted, it is reasonable to expect OPEC member states could increase their production
– in the short term to balance out the majority of the estimated 6 mb/d supply-demand gap, and in
the medium to long term to substitute for the dropping of Russian oil production capacity. Indeed,
31
But the short-term price pressures faced by the west, regardless of the underlying facts of the
supposed supply-demand imbalance in oil markets, pale in comparison to the scale of challenges
faced by Russia in the near-term in oil markets.
As an answer to the sudden drop in oil demand in Europe, Russia aims to pivot to the East, as it
does for gas. As a more fungible commodity, a pivot east for oil is less challenging logistically
than for natural gas from Russia’s point of view, but no more beneficial. Even before official EU
and US sanctions, western importers and commodity traders largely eschewed Russian oil
purchases given not only reputational risk but also difficulty securing shipping insurance and
financing, especially after Shell was lambasted for purchasing discounted Russian oil.
32
Furthermore, the marginally higher quantities of Russian oil being purchased by China and India
are being purchased at a significant discount, with Russian Urals oil trading at the largest discount
to the Brent benchmark on record, a whopping $35 price differential – even though Urals and Brent
oil have largely traded at comparable prices prior to the invasion. Russia remains a relatively high-
cost producer relative to the other major oil producers – i.e. Saudi Arabia and the United States –
and thus any margin pressure will be felt keenly by Russia. The Urals-Brent price differential
would certainly widen even further if western allies successfully implement a potential price cap
33
In sum, the landscape for commodity exports already represents a far bleaker picture for Russia
than conventionally appreciated. Not only have total oil and gas revenues dropped by more than
half in May from the month before, by the Kremlin’s own numbers, and the last month for which
the Kremlin released its once-regular commodity export statistics, but even beyond any specific
indicator or any single count, Russia’s long-term strategic positioning as an exporter of
commodities has deteriorated dramatically. In spite of the cries of “Russian economic resilience”
or Putin propaganda over how the Russian oil and gas industries have been able to conquer the
challenge of western sanctions, the truth of the matter is Russia faces existential challenges in its
oil markets – with a rapidly dwindling set of global purchasers. Its isolation from the west has
devastated Russia’s strategic hand in negotiating with China and India, notoriously price-
conscious buyers who retain close ties to other major commodity exporters. These countries have
not been shy to exploit sanctioned pariah countries before, with China notoriously driving
massively discounted oil deals with countries such as Iran and Venezuela with regularity. Even
more importantly, in order to execute the “pivot to the East”, Putin must leverage technology
ranging from shale to pipeline construction to Arctic development. With the withdrawal of Rosneft
and Gazprom’s international partners, Russia’s own energy giants have nary a hope of leveraging
Russia’s tremendous oil and gas reserves, particularly in Siberia and the Arctic, and actually
34
Copper
As we have seen in the two previous sections, Russia is losing out as the world’s energy markets
rewire with Russia’s strategic position deteriorating rapidly. Russia’s strategic weakness as a
fading commodity exporter is further exacerbated by the fact that Russia remains a marginal
exporter, at best, of most industrial metals, most prominently copper, which is widely seen as a
gauge of global economic health as “Dr. Copper”. Copper is especially important to the energy
transition, and Russia’s failure both to tap into its copper reserves and its lack of renewable
development has not positioned it well in copper markets in the years ahead.
The copper value chain is highly concentrated, to the detriment of Russia. There are 2 countries
responsible for around 38% of the mine production: Peru and Chile. The latter is known to possess
the world's largest reserve base accounting for about 23% of global reserves. According to the US
Geological Survey (USGS), Russian copper reserves are estimated at only 7% of global reserves.
Mine production, which generally aligns with the size of reserves, places Russia in 8th place with
about 4% of global mine production, meaning that Russia’s already minor share of global reserves
is dramatically under-tapped – partially a result of the significant capital investment and
technological capital required to successfully operate a copper mine, both of which have been
lacking in Russia. Copper processing has a different geographical composition, with China leading
the way in both smelting and refining.
Demand for copper is expected to strongly accelerate in the coming years, to the detriment of
Russia – on several fronts. The main drivers for copper demand growth over the past two decades
have been industrial production in developed countries as well as the commodity supercycle
associated with China's (and other BRICS countries) economic growth, rapid urbanization, and
construction and development. In particular, copper is used in building construction, appliances,
35
Moving forward, however, copper is poised to become even more important to the energy supply
chain, specifically. Access to copper among other critical rare-earth minerals is crucial to the
success of the energy transition and meeting zero-emission goals, and copper will be essential in
the production of electric cars, batteries, green energy generation (including photovoltaic panels
and wind turbines), as well as power transmission and distribution. An increase in copper demand
related to the energy complex does not bode well for Russia.
Russia is not central to the copper value chain – and copper has never represented a meaningful
proportion of Russia’s revenue from energy exports. Not only does Russia not possess any
significant share of global copper reserves, but what reserves it does possess are already under-
tapped and operating under-potential as is. This is unlikely to change, even if prices were to rise,
as many expect.
Given the massive retreat of MNCs from Russia, including mining machinery and equipment
suppliers, a significant slowdown in the Russia's production capacity growth can be anticipated
regardless of what copper prices do. The expected opening of the Ak-Sug and Malmyzhskoye
mining projects, which would add 120,000 and 250,000 metric tons of annual capacity by 2026,
respectively, have already been cast in doubt. Although it is difficult to estimate the long-term
effects at this point, it is very likely that Russia, despite its reserves, will not benefit significantly
from the incoming unprecedented increase in demand for copper and other critical metals. The
opening of new copper mines takes upwards of a decade by even the most optimistic estimates,
and such long-cycle, capital intensive investments require not only cutting-edge western
technology but also a stable political environment for financial backers to be able to invest with
patience. Even if Russia were to prepare to ramp up copper production today – which it is not,
since electrification does not align with Putin’s political narrative vilifying the energy transition –
Russia would not have any meaningful increase in capacity for at least a decade if not more.
Furthermore, without access to MNCs and innovative mining technology, it is unlikely that Russia
could increase the capacity utilization rate in existing projects or increase the recycling rate, thus
precluding an increase in both primary as well as secondary production. Leading copper
consuming countries, namely China, are already sourcing new copper supplies from African and
Central Asian partners without even considering Russia as a potential source of new copper
production.
36
Imports have not received much coverage outside of Russia for several reasons. First, while
they are crucial to Russian domestic consumption and production, and thus to the lives of
everyday Russians, they are not crucial as a source of revenue to the Russian state. Tariffs
collected from imports represent a miniscule portion of the Russian budget, and most
economists, policymakers and analysts have been focused on the main source of Russian
revenue – commodity exports – rather than Russian imports, despite their domestic
importance.
37
Third, what little attention has been given to imports has disproportionately focused on the
leakages that remain. No doubt, imports into Russia have not been choked to zero. Our own
Yale CELI List of Companies that have curtailed operations in Russia still features several
hundred companies rated “F” – meaning they are essentially doing business-as-usual in
Russia, completely undeterred by the withdrawal of over 1,000 of their global peers. When
the subject of Russian imports draws any attention at all, it is usually calling attention to
companies that continue to do business in Russia and which provide imports into Russia.
While this is obviously important, selective anecdotal examples of companies that continue
to ship products into Russia do not capture the whole picture.
By far and large, the flow of imports into Russia has drastically slowed in the months since
the invasion. A review of trade data from Russia’s top trade partners – since, again, the
Kremlin is no longer releasing its own import data – suggests that Russian imports fell by
upwards of ~50% in the initial months following the invasion. Despite the Kremlin’s secrecy,
even the Central Bank of Russia acknowledges as much. In a speech given by Bank of Russia
Governor Elvira Nabiullina two months ago, Nabiullina conceded:
“Today, almost all companies are experiencing disruptions in production and logistics
chains and in their settlements with foreign counterparties. We receive this information from
our regional branches. That said, domestic demand is still active, the need for goods
remains. Due to the contraction of imports and the closure of some foreign markets, this
demand will shift increasingly more towards domestic goods. It is critical in the current
situation to restore supply as soon as possible. Companies have already started to search
new opportunities, including new target markets and new suppliers of equipment,
technologies, and components for manufacture. Previously, it was unprofitable to produce
certain goods inside the country, whereas now this is becoming more interesting
for businesses. This is how the economy is adjusting to the changing conditions, which
unavoidably involves changes in relative prices in the economy and a temporary rise
in inflation…..foreign trade conditions are the key uncertainty amid the increasing pressure
of sanctions. The restrictions imposed affect a considerable part of exports and imports.
In addition to the official sanctions, foreign companies’ decisions to suspend their operation
38
In the initial days of the Russian Business Retreat, when hundreds of western businesses
rushed to exit Russia, the authors – who were deluged with media inquiries given the
prominence of the Yale CELI List of Companies curtailing operations in Russia – were
frequently asked whether Chinese companies would rush to fill the spots vacated by western
businesses. Many naïve observers cynically remarked that the Business Retreat would be
futile, as Chinese companies would relish the opportunity to do more business in Russia, and
the Russian economy would barely miss a beat. This is not at all what has played out – and
quite to the contrary.
In fact, according to recent monthly releases from the Customs General Administration of
China, which maintains detailed Chinese trade data with detailed breakdowns of exports to
individual trade partners, Chinese exports to Russia plummeted by 50% from the start of the
year to April, falling from over $8 billion monthly at the end of 2021 to under $4 billion in
April. This aligns with our anecdotal observations of several Chinese banks withdrawing all
credit and financing from Russia following the start of the invasion, including ICBC, the New
Development Bank, and the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank, in addition to energy
giants such as Sinochem suspending all Russian investments and joint ventures.
39
40
Given the extremely minor proportion of Chinese exports going to Russia vis-à-vis China’s
trading relationship with the United States and Europe, clearly most Chinese companies are
much more wary of losing access to US and European markets by running afoul of US
sanctions and crossing US companies than they are of losing whatever erstwhile market share
they had in Russia. The dangers of losing access to US technology are already readily
apparent from China’s point of view. When the US imposed export restrictions on Chinese
telecom companies Huawei and ZTE in 2020, they were unable to source advanced
microchips and saw a massive reduction in their chip-dependent smartphone businesses – a
fate which no Chinese company wants to suffer by running afoul of US sanctions related to
Russia.
China is the most prominent example, but other trade partners have been just as reticent to
export to Russia. In fact, it appears that exports to Russia from sanctioning and non-
sanctioning countries have collapsed at a roughly comparable rate in the months following
the invasion. One analysis found that non-sanctioning countries saw exports to Russia fall by
an average of 40%, while sanctioning countries saw exports fall an average of 60%, reflecting
the disadvantaged economic position Russia finds itself vis-à-vis practically all its trade
partners regardless of political rhetoric.
Many Russian economists cite the necessity of finding new trade partners and broadening the
range of countries from which Russia imports manufactured products, but the reality is there
are few potential partners eager to engage in an economic relationship with Russia, and those
that are inclined to help simply do not have the technological prowess or economic scale to
replace Russia’s lost imports. Case in point, Belarus has offered to “help Russia obtain
substitutes for Western and Asia microchips”, but Belarus – not known for being a tech hub
– simply does not have the technological capabilities to step into the shoes of Russia’s
41
The steep drop-off in Russian imports, unsurprisingly, has caused increasing hardship on the
domestic consumption and production fronts. One survey done by the Central Bank of Russia
found that well over two-thirds of surveyed companies experienced import problems, and
manufacturers, in particular, reported a shortage of raw materials, parts, and components.
Unsurprisingly, the focus has shifted towards import substitution – a topic analyzed in closer
detail in Section IV. But in short, this has not been fruitful. Despite Russian companies’
desperate efforts to find alternative production and re-orient supply chains towards domestic
substitutes, according to a survey by Russia’s Gaidar Institute for Economic Policy, a
whopping 81% of manufacturers said they could not find any Russian versions of imported
products they need, and more than half were “highly dissatisfied” with the quality of
homegrown production even when domestic substitutes could be sourced.
In short, the drop-off in Russian imports has severely impeded the domestic Russian economy
with devastating consequences for domestic consumption and production, as explained in
more depth in Section IV. While outsiders are often more focused on Russian exports than
Russian imports, the importance of Russian imports cannot be understated: after all, not only
do imports represent ~20% of the Russian GDP, compared to only 16% in China and even
less in other comparable economies such as India and Brazil; but in addition, in 2021, imports
accounted for 75% of nonfood consumer goods in the Russian retail market; and in some
sectors the share was even higher, rising to 86% in telecommunications equipment as one
example. The fact that the flow of Russian imports has been throttled back severely – even if
not choked off completely – is reflective of Russia’s diminished global positioning and
weakening economic leverage – further reinforcing the asymmetric nature of Russia’s trade
relationships across both exports and imports. In short, Russia needs global markets far more
than the rest of the world needs Russian markets.
No doubt, more work remains to be done: after all, there remain too many “F” companies
42
The Russian domestic economy, in many ways, remains somewhat of a black box for many
outside observers. Many western analyses of domestic consumption and production are
overly reliant on official Rosstat releases, which are, as described in Section I, whitewashed
and cherry-picked to select for the most favorable statistics while obscuring those which do
not advance the propaganda of the Kremlin.
The question of how Russian domestic consumption and production are holding up in the
face of business retreats and sanctions is of crucial importance. While measures of national
accounts and macroeconomic strength, such as assessments of Russian export revenues, are
of crucial importance to Putin and the Kremlin – and by extension, Russia’s war-fighting
capabilities – many average Russian citizens interface most directly with the economic
impact of the war through everyday domestic consumption and production. Thus, to the
extent that Russian citizens are an important stakeholder to the Russian government, the
strength (or more aptly, weakness) of domestic consumption and production may hold
outsized influence in determining the degree to which Russia can continue to withstand the
economic devastation inflicted by business retreats and sanctions.
Domestic consumption and production are especially important given the widespread
difficulties faced by Russian companies in obtaining Russian imports, as discussed in Section
III. The level of desperation of Russian producers who are unable to procure supplies and
inputs is reflected by many anecdotal reports coming out of Russia. As Commerce Secretary
Gina Raimondo testified in a recent Senate hearing, “we have reports from Ukrainians that
when they find Russian military equipment on the ground, it’s filled with semiconductors
43
In desperation, Putin has effectively legalized grey market and intellectual property
infringement – and at times has outright encouraged parallel imports. Putin declared the
goods of certain companies exempt from trademark laws, including electronic components
from manufacturers such as Cisco, Intel, Motorola, and Siemens as well as industrial goods
such as paper, textiles, ceramics, locomotives, and nuclear reactors.
Despite Putin’s efforts, there is little evidence that these permissive parallel import
substitution laws are actually having much effect, especially in sensitive sectors such as
aerospace. Scattered, unconfirmed reports of rogue companies leveraging Putin’s permissive
parallel import substitution law to import grey-market parts have not improved material
shortages within Russian supply. And for the reasons described in Sections II and III, most
countries such as China are extremely hesitant to risk running afoul of US sanctions, despite
Putin’s hopes of re-routing trade and supply chains through developing nations and direct,
personal appeals to the leaders of those developing nations. This is especially true in cases
where companies may face lawsuits for trademark or copyright infringement in their host
nations, which precludes greater foreign cooperation with Putin’s parallel import schemes.
44
45
46
47
“In the past years, we have focused a lot of attention on import substitution, succeeding in a
range of industries…..we need to possess critical technologies in order to be able to move
swiftly should we need to start our own production of any product. This is what we did when
we quickly started making coronavirus vaccines, and most recently launched the production
of many other products and services. Russia possesses the professional, scientific and
technological potential to develop products that enjoy high demand, including household
48
And in a sign of how important import substitution is to Putin personally, Putin’s youngest
daughter, Katerina Tikhonova, was made co-chair of the Russian Union of Industrialists and
Entrepreneurs’ RSPP Import Substitution Coordination Council, a highly influential business
group within Russia.
Despite Putin’s bravado and personal conviction, the fact remains that import substitution has
not been successful thus far – and Russian innovation lags far behind that of peer countries.
Taking the automobile sector as an example, despite the fact that foreign-made automobile
sales have come to a complete halt as referenced above, there has not been any compensatory
increase in domestic auto production within Russia – and quite to the contrary. Russian
domestic production of automobiles has actually plummeted, as the production of
automobiles within Russia has long been reliant on international supply chains for not only
raw materials such as steel and machinery, but also complex parts such as brakes and airbags
in addition to western technology in semiconductors. While Russia is continuing to salvage
and cannibalize parts while snatching parallel imports of microchips to continue some
production, these obstacles impede scaling up production to the levels envisioned by Putin
lest Russia be able to design and produce their own technology – a highly unlikely
proposition.
49
Even at these minimal production levels, significant shortcuts are being taken. Russia went
so far as to suspend car production safety requirements in domestic automobile
manufacturing, and many of the cars being manufactured post-invasion now lack such
essentials as airbags and anti-lock brakes. Likewise, within aerospace, even though the state
aviation authority Rosaviatsia issued production certificates to five Russian companies
authorizing them to make bootleg parts for aircraft, the manufacturers are apparently
struggling to produce anything beyond minor cabin items such as seats and galley equipment,
with sensitive flight-critical components still far off.
The auto and aviation sectors are far from the only sectors where despite Putin’s rallying cries
of import substitution, domestic manufacturing is struggling to produce. In fact, a more
systemic and comprehensive analysis reveals that these patterns are inherent across the entire
50
When domestic industrial production is measured by volume rather than value added, cross-
filtered against a more granular breakdown by sub-industry, the picture becomes even bleaker
suggesting large-scale shutdowns of the Russian industrial base, which is evidently operating
at a fraction of its usual capacity. Industrial production volume in crucial industries such as
appliances, railways, steel, textiles, batteries, apparel, and rubber fell by well over 20%, while
other sub-industries such as electronics, sports, furniture, jewelry, fertilizers, and fishing fell
in excess of 10%.
And despite Putin’s rallying cries of self-sufficiency, all of these industries share a crucial
similarity: they simply cannot replace imported parts and components that Russia lacks the
technological prowess to make, and illicit, shadowy parallel imports can only go so far. For
51
The breadth of this industrial production slowdown across the Russian economy is further
worsened by a rapidly deteriorating outlook for new purchases and orders. A reading of the
Russian Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) - which captures how purchasing managers are
viewing the economy – shows that new orders have plunged across the board, both in terms
of domestic Russian orders as well as Russian orders for foreign products and foreign orders
of Russian products. Clearly, purchasing managers want nothing to do with placing new
orders until the geopolitical environment stabilizes. Likewise, PMIs highlight that inventories
have dropped and delivery times have increased in the context of widespread supply-chain
problems, so even if new orders were to be placed, the fulfillment of those orders would
continue to pose steep challenges to Russian domestic production.
Added together, these structural headwinds facing Russian domestic consumption and
52
Beyond Russia’s deteriorating trade position and its struggling domestic economy, Russia’s
long-term economic outlook is suffering under the weight of 1) business flight from Russia;
2) capital flight from Russia; and 3) population flight from Russia. Needless to say, most
prosperous economies seek to attract rather than repel all three in the forms of, inter alia, 1)
MNCs; 2) foreign direct investment and capital inflows; and 3) talented and educated
workforces and immigration. Russia’s inability to retain 1) businesses; 2) capital and 3) talent
– while not captured in Rosstat’s official statistics and thus not reflected in some conventional
analyses of the Russian economy – degrade the Russian economy’s future productivity base
and ability to rebound from current lows.
The authors of this paper are most intimately familiar with the business flight from Russia –
and are in a unique position to assess and quantify the impact of these business retreats on
the Russian economy. Since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine began in February 2022, the
authors have led an intensive research effort to track the responses of nearly 1,500 public and
private companies from across the globe, with well over 1,000 companies publicly
announcing they are voluntarily curtailing operations in Russia to some degree beyond the
bare minimum legally required by international sanctions.
The list has been continually updated over the last 4 months with new additions by a team of
Yale researchers led by the authors, including two dozen experts with diverse backgrounds
in financial analysis, economics, accounting, strategy, governance, geopolitics, and Eurasian
affairs, with collective fluency in twelve languages. This proprietary dataset, which contains
detailed Russian revenue information across well over 1,000 companies, was compiled not
only using public sources such as government regulatory filings, tax documents, company
statements, financial analyst reports, earnings calls, Bloomberg, FactSet, MSCI, S&P Capital
53
When the list was first published the week of February 28, only several dozen companies had
announced their departure from Russia. In the two months since, this list of companies
staying/leaving Russia has already garnered significant attention for its role in helping
catalyze the mass corporate exodus from Russia, with widespread media coverage and
circulation across company boardrooms, policymaker circles, and other communities of
concerned citizens across the world.
Based on the authors’ proprietary database tracking the retreats of over 1,000 companies, our
researchers found that across all these 1,000 companies aggregated together, the value of the
Russian revenue represented by these companies and the value of these companies’
investments in Russia together exceed $600 billion – a startling figure representing
approximately 40% of Russia’s GDP. We further found that these companies, in total, employ
Russian local staff of well over 1 million individuals. The value of these companies’
investment in Russia represents the lion’s share of all accumulated, active foreign investment
in Russia since the fall of the Soviet Union – meaning the retreat of well over 1,000
companies in the span of three months has almost single-handedly reversed three decades’
worth of Russian economic integration with the rest of the world, while undoing years of
54
To be sure, this is not to say that the GDP of Russia will contract 40% overnight. Many of
the 1,000+ businesses who have curtailed operations in Russia are still in the process of
winding down their operation, meaning it will take months if not even years to feel the full
impact of their withdrawal. Other companies from this list of 1,000+ have already divested
or sold their Russian businesses to local Russian operators, which means that even though
these businesses will lack western technical and financial support and know-how and
deteriorate in the long-run, in the short-term, they will still continue to operate to some extent
and thus cannot be written off from Russian GDP immediately. There are also some
companies which continue some operations in Russia while pulling out of other operations,
so any hit to Russian GDP from these companies would be partial rather than total. It is
impossible to capture the full economic impact of the Russian business retreat as many of the
most devastating consequences will be felt years from now -with long-term structural losses
to the Russian economy beyond any single dollar figure of lost revenue or lost investment.
Nevertheless, the fact that the 1,000+ companies that have curtailed operations represent such
a high proportion of Russia’s GDP – 40% - signifies the importance of these economies to
the Russian economy prior to the war, and how the Russian economy must now undergo
dramatic, forced transformations with these companies pulling out, as amplified throughout
this paper.
Some might argue that the companies that curtailed operations in Russia were forced to incur
a short-term loss in Russian revenue and investment – despite the fact the impact on Russia
is more painful in both the short-term and the long-term – but it is not even true to say that
the companies leaving Russia incurred any losses. In fact, rather than penalizing companies
for leaving Russia, in a separate study, we found that foreign investors by far and large
rewarded companies for removing the risk overhang associated with exposure to Russia –
that the value of aggregate stock market gained since the start of the invasion for companies
that have left Russia far outweigh the value of Russian asset divestitures and lost Russian
revenue, which for most multinational corporations, represented a small fraction of total
revenue to start with – no more than 1-2% in most cases. Thus, clearly the loss of 1,000+
companies has been borne solely by Russia – in both the short-term and the long-term – while
leaving Russia actually benefitted companies.
The findings of our research team proving the devastating impact of business retreats and
55
Unsurprisingly, the Russian business retreat has coincided with rapid “brain-drain” as
talented, educated Russians flee the country in droves. It is impossible to assess the exact
number of Russians who have left Russia permanently since the outset of the invasion, but
most estimates peg the number as no less than five hundred thousand – with the vast majority
being highly-educated and highly-skilled workers in competitive industries such as
technology. The mass exodus of skilled Russian natives is further amplified by the forcible
expulsion of a not-insignificant population of western expatriates working in Russia. These
workers – who understand the structural challenges facing the Russian economy and technical
hurdles obstructing Putin’s vows of self-sufficiency and import substitution – are joined by
many of Russia’s few remaining high-net-worth and ultra-high-net-worth individuals, who
understand that capital controls, taxes, the business and investment climate, and government
restrictions are only likely to become worse in the years ahead, particularly for those holding
financial capital. By one measure, 15,000 ultra-high-net-worth individuals have fled Russia
56
These high net worth individuals are bringing their wealth with them when they flee,
contributing to soaring private capital outflows, even by the Central Bank of Russia’s own
admission. The official level of capital outflows indicated by the Bank of Russia in Q1, nearly
$70 billion USD, is likely to be a gross underestimate of the actual level of capital outflows,
given strict capital controls implemented by the Kremlin restricting the amount of wealth
Russian citizens can transfer out of the country, particularly foreign-currency denominated
wealth. Any additional capital outflows which have skirted these capital controls are unlikely
to have been captured by the Central Bank of Russia’s gauge, and indeed, by all anecdotal
reports, wealthy Russians are flocking for safe havens in droves. Many of these Russians
have swarmed to financial centers such as Dubai in the Middle East; the presence of Russian
capital inflows in Dubai is so significant in magnitude that many local real estate experts
attribute Dubai’s ballooning property values over the last 4 months to the influx of new
Russian wealth seeking shelter, with many Dubai real estate firms reporting 100% and even
200% year-over-year increases in sales to buyers from Russia.
As global businesses swarmed for the exits and after the implementation of devastating
sanctions by the US and EU in the early weeks following the invasion, many western
economists and policymakers had unrealistic expectations that the Russian economy may
collapse or that a financial crisis might take hold. Sanction regimes very rarely cause
instantaneous financial crises or economic collapses; rather, they tend to be longer-duration
tools designed to structurally weaken a nation’s economy while isolating it from global
markets. Indeed, as this paper has shown, the impact of business retreats and sanctions on the
Russian economy has been nothing short of catastrophic, eroding the Russian economy’s
competitiveness while exacerbating internal structural weaknesses.
57
One of the best case studies for how, through massive and unsustainable government
intervention, the Kremlin has been able to temporarily prop up the Russian economy also
happens to be one of Putin’s favorite propaganda talking points: the appreciation of the ruble,
which is now the strongest-performing currency this year by some measures. Overnight, as
soon as the invasion commenced, the exchange rate for the ruble relative to the dollar jumped
from ~75 to ~110 – but the Kremlin immediately announced a rigorous set of capital controls
on the ruble including a blanket ban on citizens sending money to bank accounts abroad and
foreign money transfers; a suspension on cash withdrawals from dollar banking accounts
beyond $10,000 per person; a mandate for all exporters to exchange 80% of foreign currency
earnings for rubles; a suspension of direct dollar conversions for individuals with ruble-
denominated banking accounts; a suspension of domestic lending in foreign currencies; a
58
However, the official exchange rate given the presence of such draconian capital controls can
be misleading – as the ruble is, unsurprisingly, trading at dramatically diminished volumes
compared to pre-invasion on low liquidity. By many reports, much of this erstwhile trading
has migrated to unofficial ruble black markets, where the spread between the official
exchange rate and the actual exchange rate is equally dramatic – upwards of 20% to 100%
higher than the official exchange rate, in some cases, given a shortage of obtainable, liquid
dollars within Russia. Even the Bank of Russia has admitted that the exchange rate is a
reflection more of government policies and a blunt expression of the country’s trade balance
rather than freely tradeable liquid FX markets.
59
The ultimate scale of these relief expenditures is still unclear as they are currently ongoing,
but initial signs point towards a massive, unprecedented magnitude of spending. By the
60
It may be impossible to determine just how much Putin is spending and where the money is
going, but this much is certain: this inflated level of spending, put simply, is unsustainable
for the Kremlin. The Kremlin is largely financing its current social program the same way
other Petrostates such as Saudi Arabia finance massive social expenditures – through oil and
gas revenues. As explained in Section II, while there are increasing degrees of sanctions that
need to be levered on Russia in order to more efficiently throttle back Russian oil and gas
revenue, Russia is already at a strategic disadvantage and facing a secular decline in oil and
gas revenue for years to come. Any decrease in oil and gas revenues or oil and gas export
volumes would immediately put a strain on the Kremlin’s budget – especially as much of the
Kremlin’s fiscal stimulus projects such as infrastructure appear to be long-duration, requiring
years’ worth of fixed capital investment which is not easily reversible. Given the challenges
faced by the Kremlin with a $35 Ural-Brent price differential, difficulties re-orienting piped
gas supplies toward Asia and facing potential oil and gas embargoes by the west, the dangers
of Putin’s bet are readily apparent.
Should oil and gas revenue decline, then Putin’s financing conundrum for his new program
of enhanced spending would become much more interesting. In past instances when oil and
gas revenue contracted, Putin was able to draw upon a variety of opaque “rainy-day” funds
ranging across Russia’s formidable $600 billion foreign exchange reserves and National
Wealth Fund, but there are signs that even these resources are coming under strain.
The most obvious challenge facing Putin’s rainy-day funds is the fact that of his $600 billion
in foreign exchange reserves, accumulated from years’ worth of oil and gas revenues, $300
billion is frozen and out of reach with allied countries across the US, Europe and Japan
restricting access. There have been some calls to seize this $300 billion to finance the
61
Another sign that Putin may be spending down his rainy-day funds faster than conventionally
realized is in his recent executive orders related to priority spending areas. Although the
finance ministry had planned to reinstate a long-standing Russian budgetary rule that surplus
62
One sign of just how high spending levels have risen – and the challenge facing the National
Wealth Fund – is the fact that Finance Minister Anton Siluanov has readily acknowledged
that the Russian government budget will likely be in deficit this year by an amount equivalent
to 2% of Russian GDP – compared to previous rosy projections of a surplus, as has been
typical the past few years. Even more interestingly, Siluanov floated the idea of withdrawing
funds from the National Wealth Fund equivalent to a third of the entire fund to pay for this
deficit – a whopping withdrawal which would far surpass previous withdrawals by many
orders. If Russia is running a budget deficit requiring the drawdown of a third of its sovereign
wealth fund when oil and gas revenues are still relatively strong, the financial picture which
is emerging of the Kremlin’s financing does not seem promising at all. In fact, the picture
seems to be of a Kremlin which is fast running out of money, despite intentional obfuscation.
The challenges facing Russia’s sovereign financing are exacerbated by Russia’s newfound
lack of access to international capital markets. With Russia’s first default since 1917 on its
sovereign debt, Russia is now frozen out of international debt issuances for years to come
and unable to tap into traditional sovereign financing across international capital pools.
Russia can continue to issue its version of domestic bonds, known as OFZs, but the total
capital pool available within Russia domestically is a fraction of the financing needed to
sustain these levels of spending by the Russian government over an entire economic cycle.
And indeed, the Finance Minister has confirmed that Russia is not raising debt to pay for its
fiscal program and has no plans to do so in the near-term.
At the end of the day, despite these signals and clues, the black-box that is the budget and
financing of the Russian state cannot be known with 100% precision or certainty – and
especially now that Putin is going out of his way to obscure the sources and use of state
spending. But certain facts are indisputable. Thanks to a massive wave of fiscal and monetary
stimulus unleashed post-invasion, Russian state spending and social obligations are now at a
magnitude much higher than before. To sustain this unprecedented level of spending, any
decrease in Russian gas and oil revenues would force Russia to tap into its “rainy-day” funds
even more than it is already doing, but these reserves are seemingly already dwindling, with
63
Whether oil and gas revenue does go up from here, of course, is largely in the hands of the
allied countries of the world.
Financial markets are useful not only as an indicator of current financial and liquidity
conditions, but also as a discounting mechanism for understanding what is priced into the
future. If the performance of Russian financial markets across asset classes this year is to be
given any weight, then the message seems to be clear: the situation is dire now, and the
situation is dire moving forward.
64
Given these debilitating financing constraints, the Kremlin has stepped into a position as the
de facto lender of last resort to prop up the Russian economy and prevent a devastating
liquidity squeeze, as described in Section VI, saturating the economy with fiscal stimulus and
government-subsidized credit if not outright direct payments. The availability of the
Kremlin’s subsidized financing has prevented a bank run at the very least if not more
debilitating financial contagion, and perhaps even prevented an outright financial crisis.
The Kremlin’s propping up of financial stability, however precarious, through the injection
of easy ruble-denominated liquidity and credit does not change the fact that even without an
outright financial crisis, Russian financial markets are reflecting current doom and gloom,
and discounting future doom and gloom for some time to come.
Nowhere are these pessimistic projections more obvious than in domestic Russian equity
markets. The Moscow Stock Exchange was shut down for all trading for days following the
invasion of Ukraine. Only when enough Kremlin-pumped liquidity made its way into the
financial system did the stock market finally re-open, and even then, it was a partial
reopening: foreign investors were completely prohibited from transacting on the Moscow
Stock Exchange, meaning foreign investors could not even liquidate their existing Russian
stock positions. Amazingly, these restrictions remain in place, unchanged, even today – so
Russian equity markets reflect purely domestic Russian sentiment, with only Russians being
allowed to transact, and trading volumes thus remain extremely depressed.
65
What is even more striking is that, in examining single stock performance across the Moscow
Stock Exchange, several of the worst performing single stocks are those of Rosneft, the
Russian state oil giant, and Gazprom, the state gas giant – and some of the erstwhile crown
jewels of the Russian economy. Clearly, financial markets are unwilling to touch these
companies with a ten-foot pole in the expectation that Putin is cannibalizing what had been
credible, profit-making companies to advance his geopolitical agenda. But this depressed
performance also reflects the fact that Russians seem to recognize the deterioration in
Russia’s positioning as an oil & gas exporter, as explained in Section II of this paper, with
66
Russian credit markets are somewhat more difficult to analyze than Russian equity markets,
given a lack of traditional financial infrastructure and availability of data. What is clear,
however, is that the ruble-denominated, Kremlin-backed liquidity and credit injections which
prevented a financial crisis in the days following the invasion have been insufficient to spur
true credit formation and risk-taking by small and medium sized businesses – and that the
Kremlin’s liquidity injections into companies seem to have been confined to large SOE’s
without that liquidity making its way into the broader economy. In fact, despite the permissive
67
VIII. Conclusions
- Despite some lingering leakiness, Russian imports have largely collapsed, and the
country faces stark challenges securing crucial inputs, parts, and technology from
hesitant trade partners, leading to widespread supply shortages within its domestic
economy – as we explain further in Section III of this paper.
- As a result of the business retreat, Russia has lost companies representing ~40% of its
GDP, reversing nearly all of three decades’ worth of foreign investment and
buttressing unprecedented simultaneous capital and population flight in a mass
exodus of Russia’s economic base – as we explain further in Section V of this paper.
68
- Looking ahead, there is no path out of economic oblivion for Russia as long as the
allied countries remain unified in maintaining and increasing sanctions pressure
against Russia.
Looking ahead, there is no path out of economic oblivion for Russia as long as the allied
countries remain unified in maintaining and increasing sanctions pressure against Russia, and
The Kyiv School of Economics and McFaul-Yermak Working Group have led the way in
proposing additional sanctions measures across individual sanctions, energy sanctions and
financial sanctions, led by Ambassador Michael McFaul, Tymofiy Mylovanov, Nataliia
Shapoval, and Andriy Boytsun.
Defeatist headlines arguing that Russia’s economy has bounced back are simply not factual -
the facts are that, by any metric and on any level, the Russian economy is reeling, and now is
not the time to step on the brakes.
69
https://yale.box.com/s/7f6agg5ezscj234kahx35lil04udqgeo
70
August 2022
Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute
Jeffrey Sonnenfeld
Jeffrey A. Sonnenfeld, President of the Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute; Senior Associate Dean and Lester Crown
Professor in Management Practice at Yale School of Management
Steven Tian, Director of Research at the Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute, Yale University
Franek Sokolowski, Research Fellow in Business & Economics at the Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute, Yale
University
Michal Wyrebkowski, Research Assistant in Energy at the Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute and University of
Pennsylvania, Wharton Business School
Mateusz Kasprowicz, Research Assistant at the Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute and Warsaw School of Economics
2
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Introduction
• Our team of experts, using private Russian language and direct data sources
including high frequency consumer data, cross-channel checks, releases from
Russia’s international trade partners, and data mining of complex shipping data,
have released one of the first comprehensive economic analyses measuring
Russian current economic activity five months into the invasion. From our
analysis, it becomes clear: business retreats and sanctions are catastrophically
crippling the Russian economy.
3
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Introduction
• This visual slide deck accompanies the working paper “Business Retreats and
Sanctions Are Crippling the Russian Economy” by Jeffrey Sonnenfeld et al.
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4167193
4
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Working Paper
The full working paper can be accessed by
clicking on the below link:
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?a
bstract_id=4167193
5
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Under The Hood: Russian Economy In Crisis - Table of Contents
Unsustainable Fiscal and Monetary Stimulus And Kremlin Interventions Conceal Structural
6
Economic Weaknesses
Financial Markets Pricing In Sustained Weakness In Real Economy with Liquidity and Credit
7
Contracting
8 Conclusion: Russia’s Economic Vulnerabilities Reveal Key Lessons For The West
6
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Russian Economy In Crisis Theme #1: Decoding Russian Economic Statistics
Unsustainable Fiscal and Monetary Stimulus And Kremlin Interventions Conceal Structural
6
Economic Weaknesses
Financial Markets Pricing In Sustained Weakness In Real Economy with Liquidity and Credit
7
Contracting
8 Conclusion: Russia’s Economic Vulnerabilities Reveal Key Lessons For The West
7
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Optimistic Forecasts Have It All Wrong with Cherry-Picked
Decoding Russian Statistics: Drinking From The Fountain of Russian Propaganda
Economic Statistics
Statistics Withheld By the Kremlin Post-Invasion
Many of the optimistic economic
analyses, forecasts, and projections which
All Foreign Trade Data
have proliferated in recent months share a
crucial methodological flaw: these
All Export Data
analyses draw most, if not all of their
underlying evidence from periodic All Import Data
economic releases by the Russian
government itself. There are three Oil and Gas Monthly Output Data
significant, underappreciated
considerations which severely strain the Capital Inflows and Outflows
integrity of the Kremlin’s statistics since
the outset of the invasion. First, the Financial Statements of Major Companies
Kremlin’s economic releases are
becoming increasingly cherry-picked; Central Bank Monetary Base Data
partial, and incomplete, selectively tossing
out unfavorable statistics while keeping Foreign Direct Investment Data
favorable statistics.
Airline and Airport Passenger Volumes
Lending and Loan Origination Data
Sources: Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute,
Bloomberg, Atlantic Council, Russian Federal Service of
State Statistics
8
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Fudging the Numbers: Putin Has Long and Shameful Track
Decoding Russian Record of Political Interference with Rosstat
Economic Statistics
Second, even those favorable statistics Instances of Political Interference with Rosstat
which are released are questionable if not
downright dubious when measured against Putin personally transferred Rosttat to political officials at the Economic Ministry
cross-channel checks and given the
political pressure the Kremlin has exerted Putin sacked multiple Rosstat heads
to corrupt statistical integrity. Indeed, the
Kremlin has a long history of fudging
official economic statistics, even prior to
Putin appointed a political pick (former Deputy Minister) as head in May 2022
the invasion.
Alarming propensity of Kremlin economists for “switching to new methodologies”
IMF sounding alarms over “concerns about the reliability and consistency” of data
9
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Extrapolation of Misleading Early Statistics in Economic
Decoding Russian Forecasts Creates Unrealistic Projections
Economic Statistics
“even with some countries halting or phasing out energy purchases, Russia’s oil-
Third, almost all rosy projections and
forecasts are irrationally extrapolating and-gas revenue will be about $285 billion this year, according to estimates from
economic releases from the early days of
the post-invasion period, when sanctions
Bloomberg Economics based on Economy Ministry projections. That would
and the business retreat had not taken full exceed the 2021 figure by more than one-fifth” – Bloomberg, June 2022
effect, rather than the most recent, up-to-
date numbers from recent weeks and
months. For example, many alarming
forecasts projecting strong revenue from
“It is now clear that the economic war against Russia is not working nearly as
energy exports were based on the last well as people thought it would. Thanks to rising energy prices, Bloomberg News
available official export data from March,
even though many business withdrawals projects the Russian government will make considerably more revenue from oil
and sanctions on energy had not yet taken and gas than it did before the war, around $285 billion this year compared
effect, with orders placed prior to the
invasion still being delivered. After a long with $236 billion in 2021.” – Fareed Zakaria, July 7, 2022
and unexplained delay, only a few weeks
ago did the Kremlin finally disclose that
total oil and gas revenues dropped by
more than half in May from prior months,
by the Kremlin’s own numbers – along Russia Monthly Oil and Gas Revenue
with the declaration that the Kremlin
would cease releasing any new oil and gas Forecasts mistakenly projecting off inflated March
revenues from that point on. totals rather than more realistic May totals
Sources: Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute,
Bloomberg, The Washington Post, Business Insider,
Russian Federal Service of State Statistics
10 March May
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Russian Economy In Crisis Theme #2: Commodity Exports
Unsustainable Fiscal and Monetary Stimulus And Kremlin Interventions Conceal Structural
6
Economic Weaknesses
Financial Markets Pricing In Sustained Weakness In Real Economy with Liquidity and Credit
7
Contracting
8 Conclusion: Russia’s Economic Vulnerabilities Reveal Key Lessons For The West
11
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Russian Commodity Exports Far More Important To Russia Than
Rest Of The World
Russian Exports
There is widespread under-appreciation of Russian Share of Global Commodity Exports by Commodity
the damage already wrought to Russia’s (shown as % share of global exports)
status as a leading commodity exporter. A
close macroeconomic analysis of 0 2 4 6 8 10 12
measures of current economic activity Gas
demonstrates that under the surface, Oil
Russia’s commodity exports are already Met-Coal
under severe strain. First, the importance Nickel
of commodity exports to Russia far Silver
exceeds the importance of Russian Aluminum
commodity exports to the rest of the Rye
world. Russia’s total export earnings Oats
consist overwhelmingly of revenue Copper
derived from commodities and raw Corn
materials; these export earnings make up Cobalt
well over half of Russia’s total Iron Ore
government budget in most years – and Lead
presumably an even larger proportion Zinc
now. On the flip hand, of each of the
major commodities Russia exports,
Russian supply is no more than 10% at
~60%
most.
Sources: Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute,
Morgan Stanley, Russian Federal Service of State energy revenue represents of total Russian government revenue
Statistics, JPMorgan, Bank of America Global Research,
Deutsche Bank, UBS, Bloomberg
12
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
When It Comes To Natural Gas, Russia Far More Dependent on
Europe Than Vice Versa
Russian Exports
Legacy commodity supply chains and Russian Gas Exports Destination Sources of EU Gas Imports US LNG Overtakes Russia Piped
trade patterns put Russia at a significant (shown as % of total Russian gas exports) (shown as % of total EU gas imports) Gas in EU Gas Imports
strategic and economic disadvantage. (units in bcm/billion cubic meters per month)
Europe has long been the destination of
choice for Russian commodity exports, 12
particularly energy exports, though once Post- China Others US
again, these energy exports are far more Soviet 2% 3% and
important to Russia than they are to States 10
Other
Europe. Europe’s challenges are 12% 19%
legitimate; it cannot fully replace Russian Russian
energy in the short-term without painfully 8 Piped Gas
reducing energy consumption as a
transitory measure, particularly in Russia
Qatar
Germany, Poland, and Hungary. Yet there 46%
5.5
5% 6
is some irony that although Europe has
understandably cried foul at Russia’s Algeria
politically motivated attempt to weaponize 5%
energy, particularly gas, the Russian 4
economy is hurt the most by shifting US LNG 4.5
natural gas supply chains.
2
Sources: Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute,
Morgan Stanley, ING, International Energy Agency
(IEA), Russian Federal Service of State Statistics, Bank Europe Norway 0
of America Global Research, Deutsche Bank, JPMorgan, 83% 25%
Aug '21
Oct '21
Apr '21
Feb '21
Dec '21
Apr '22
Feb '22
Jun '21
Jun '22
UBS, Bloomberg
13
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Russia Gas Exports To Europe Have Plummeted to Near Record
Lows
Russian Exports
Russian gas is transported primarily Network of Pipelines Connecting Russia and Europe Share of Russia to Europe Gas
through a complex network of fixed Transited Through Ukraine
pipelines which connects western Russia (shown as % of total Russia to Europe gas)
to Europe. Many of these pipelines flow 90%
through Ukraine, a relic of pre-1989 75%
Soviet planning when Ukraine and Russia
were both parts of the same country, and 50%
Russia has been loath to send gas through 35%
these Ukrainian pipelines since the onset
of the invasion. Combined with the recent
shutdown of the Nord Stream pipeline,
which is Russia’s largest gas route to 1991 2003 2011 2020
Europe (which was running at ~40% Russian Gas Flows to Europe
capacity prior to being shut down); (in GWh/d, by Russia-Europe pipeline)
Russian gas exports to Europe (and the
revenue that is derived) have plummeted 1200
to near-record lows.
800
400
15 Sources: Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute, Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan, Bank of America Global Research, Deutsche Bank, UBS, Bloomberg
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Russia’s “Pivot to The East” Faces Daunting Financial, Logistical
Hurdles
Russian Exports
The 16.5 billion cubic meters of gas Total Russian Gas Sent to Europe vs. China in 2021
exported by Russia to China last year (units in bcm/billion cubic meters)
represented less than 10% of the 170
billion cubic meters of natural gas sent by
Russia to the European market. Financing
of these costly gas pipeline projects also Russian Gas Sent to Europe 170
now puts Russia at a significant
disadvantage. The major operational
pipeline linking Siberia to China, the $45
billion, thirteen-hundred mile “Power of Russian Gas Sent to China 16.5
Siberia” pipeline, was completely
financed by China in 2014; now the onus
is now on Russia to fund these new
pipeline projects itself. In anticipation of
Russia Will Likely Have to Pay for Pipelines Connecting to Asia By Itself
“massive capital expenditures”, the
Russian gas giant Gazprom has already
taken the unprecedented step of
suspending dividends, the first time in
thirty years, and its stock is the single
worst performing major stock on the
Moscow Stock Exchange since the
invasion.
Sources: Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute,
Russian Federal Service of State Statistics, CNBC,
JPMorgan, Bank of America Global Research, Deutsche
Bank, UBS, Bloomberg
16
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Oil More Fungible But Even More Troublesome for Russia
Russian Exports
As a more fungible commodity, the “pivot Russian Share of Global Oil Exports Russian Oil Exports by Destination
to the East” for oil represents a different (shown as % share of global exports) (shown as % of total Russian oil exports)
situation than natural gas for Russia, but Russia, Other,
no more beneficial. Even before official 12% 8%
EU and US sanctions, western importers
and commodity traders largely eschewed
Russian oil purchases given not only Europe,
reputational risk but also difficulty 53%
securing shipping insurance and financing, Rest of
especially after Shell was lambasted for World,
purchasing discounted Russian oil. 88%
Asia,
The Russian upstream industry has long 39%
been reliant on western technology, which
combined with the loss of both Russia’s
erstwhile primary market and Russia’s
diminished economic clout, leads to even
the Russian Energy Ministry revising their Projections of Long-Term Decline in Russian Oil Production
projections of long-term oil output (in million barrels of output per day)
downward.
Base Case Brownfield +2% decline Brownfield +4% decline
12
Sources: Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute,
Morgan Stanley, ING, Oxford Institute for Energy 9
Studies, Russian Federal Service of State Statistics,
JPMorgan, Bank of America Global Research, Deutsche 6
Bank, UBS, Bloomberg
2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030
17
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
China Buying More Russian Oil – But With $35 Discount Per
Barrel
Russian Exports
Only 39% of Russia’s oil exports were Chinese Oil Imports from Russia Price Differential Between Ural (Russian)
sent to Asia last year, but this number has (shown in millions of metric tons, per China Customs) and Brent Oil Benchmarks
likely increased this year – even as the 10 (units in $ USD, spread per barrel)
Kremlin has not released any energy Jan '21 Apr '21 Jul '21 Oct '21 Jan '22 Apr '22 Jul '22
export statistics since the start of the 10
invasion, statistics released by China
indicate that China has increased its 8
Russian oil purchases rather significantly.
This oil, however, is being purchased at a 0
significant discount, with Russian Urals
oil trading at the largest discount to the 6
Brent benchmark on record, a whopping
$35 price differential – even though Urals
and Brent oil have largely traded at -10
comparable prices prior to the invasion. 4
Russia remains a relatively high-cost
producer relative to the other major oil
producers – i.e. Saudi Arabia and the -20
United States – and thus any margin 2
pressure will be felt keenly by Russia.
Sep '21
Jan '15
Sep '15
May '16
Jan '17
Sep '17
May '18
Jan '19
Sep '19
May '20
Jan '21
May '22
UBS, Bloomberg
-40
18
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Record Urals Discount Reflects Russia’s Diminished Strategic
Positioning And Relative Weakness
Russian Exports
The landscape for commodity exports Travel/Shipping Time to Redirect Russian Oil Exports via Sea Tankers
(shown in number of days to arrival at destination)
already represents a far bleaker picture for 35
Russia than conventionally appreciated. 27
Not only have total oil and gas revenues 20
dropped by more than half in May from 18
the month before, by the Kremlin’s own 7
numbers, and the last month for which the 2 4
Kremlin released its once-regular
commodity export statistics, but even Eastern Europe Northern Europe Western Europe North America Middle East Southeast Asia East Asia
beyond any specific indicator, Russia’s
long-term strategic positioning as an
exporter of commodities has deteriorated
dramatically. Its isolation from the west Unprecedented Record Urals-Brent Discount Reflects How Invasion of Ukraine Reversed Two
has devastated Russia’s strategic hand in
Decades’ Worth of Economic Progress for Russia
negotiating with China and India, (units in $ USD, spread per barrel)
notoriously price-conscious buyers who
retain close ties to other major commodity 10
exporters. These countries have not been
shy to exploit sanctioned pariah countries 0
before, with China notoriously driving -10
massively discounted oil deals with Price differential has never exceeded ~$5 in
countries such as Iran and Venezuela with -20
history prior to 2022, even during 2014 Crimean
regularity. -30 invasion and 2020 COVID oil market meltdown
Sources: Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute, Morgan
Stanley, Russian Federal Service of State Statistics, -40
JPMorgan, Bank of America Global Research, UBS, 2006 2008 2010 2012 2014 2016 2018 2020 2022
19
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Russian Economy In Crisis Theme #3: Russian Imports
Unsustainable Fiscal and Monetary Stimulus And Kremlin Interventions Conceal Structural
6
Economic Weaknesses
Financial Markets Pricing In Sustained Weakness In Real Economy with Liquidity and Credit
7
Contracting
8 Conclusion: Russia’s Economic Vulnerabilities Reveal Key Lessons For The West
20
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Russian Imports Fell Significantly In Months After Invasion
Russian Imports
Imports play an important role within Russian Imports from the Rest of the World
Russia’s domestic economy. Imports (units in $ USD billions, annualized)
consist of ~20% of Russian GDP, and the
domestic economy is largely reliant on 400
imports across industries and across the
value chain with few exceptions, despite
Putin’s bellicose delusions of total self-
sufficiency.
By far and large, the flow of imports into
Russia has drastically slowed in the 300
months since the invasion. A review of
trade data from Russia’s top trade partners
– since, again, the Kremlin is no longer
releasing its own import data – suggests
that Russian imports fell by upwards of
~50% in the initial months following the Data from Russia’s
invasion.
200 major trading partners
indicates Russian
imports fell significantly
Sources: Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute,
Russian Federal Service of State Statistics, JPMorgan,
Bank of America Global Research, Deutsche Bank,
UBS, Bloomberg
100
2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022
21
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
China Throttling Back On Exports To Russia, According To
China’s Own Official Trade Data
Russian Imports
According to the most recent monthly China Exports to Russia, Per the Customs General Administration of China
releases from the Customs General (units in $ USD billions, monthly totals)
Administration of China, which maintains
detailed Chinese trade data with detailed 9
breakdowns of exports to individual trade
partners, Chinese exports to Russia 8.14
plummeted by 50% from the start of the 8
year to April, falling from over $8 billion
monthly at the end of 2021 to under $4
billion in April.
7
This aligns with our anecdotal
observations of several Chinese banks
withdrawing all credit and financing from
Russia, including ICBC, the New 6
Development Bank, and the Asian
Infrastructure Investment Bank, in
Exports fell by more
addition to energy giants such as
Sinochem suspending all Russian
5 than half from $8 billion
investments and joint ventures – though to less than $4 billion
other Chinese companies remain active.
4
Sources: Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute,
Customs General Administration of the PRC,
Bloomberg, Russian Federal Service of State Statistics, 3.80
JPMorgan, Bank of America Global Research, Deutsche
Bank, UBS 3
Jun '21 Jul '21 Aug '21 Sep '21 Oct '21 Nov '21 Dec '21 Jan '22 Feb '22 Mar '22 Apr '22
22
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Asymmetric Trade Relationship: China Is Much More Important To
Russia Than Russia Is To China
Russian Imports
Where Do Russian Imports Come From? Where Do Chinese Exports Go?
Even on imports, Russia needs its trade (units in $ USD billions, annual totals as of 2021) (units in $ USD billions, annual totals as of 2021)
partners far more than its partners need
Russia. Given the extremely minor 0 20 40 60 80 0 100 200 300 400 500 600
proportion of Chinese exports going to
Russia vis-à-vis China’s trading 1. China 72.685 1. United States 506.367
relationship with the United States and 2. Germany 27.339 2. Hong Kong 316.165
Europe, clearly most Chinese companies
are much more wary of losing access to 3. United States 17.519 3. Japan 185.246
US and European markets by running 4. Belarus 15.619 4. South Korea 138.628
afoul of US sanctions and crossing US
companies than they are of losing 5. South Korea 12.982 5. Netherlands 130.608
whatever erstwhile market share they had
6. France 12.21 6. Germany 115.805
in Russia. China is the most prominent
example, but other trade partners have 7. Italy 12.025 7. Vietnam 109.825
been just as reticent to export to Russia. In
fact, it appears that exports to Russia from 8. Japan 9.125 8. Mexico 107.076
sanctioning and non-sanctioning countries 9. Kazakhstan 7.131 9. United Kingdom 94.841
have collapsed at a roughly comparable
rate in the months following the invasion 10. Turkey 6.511 10. India 87.481
11. Poland 5.808 11. Russia 72.685
12. Vietnam 4.893 12. Australia 72.48
Sources: Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute,
Customs General Administration of the PRC, Eurostat, 13. United Kingdom 4.464 13. Canada 72.331
Other National Sources, Bloomberg, Russian Federal
Service of State Statistics, JPMorgan, Bank of America 14. India 4.427 14. Thailand 66.374
Global Research, Deutsche Bank, UBS
15. Netherlands 4.282 15. Singapore 57.106
23
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Russian Economy In Crisis Theme #4: Russian Domestic Consumption & Production
Unsustainable Fiscal and Monetary Stimulus And Kremlin Interventions Conceal Structural
6
Economic Weaknesses
Financial Markets Pricing In Sustained Weakness In Real Economy with Liquidity and Credit
7
Contracting
8 Conclusion: Russia’s Economic Vulnerabilities Reveal Key Lessons For The West
24
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Russian Domestic Official Russia Consumer Price Index CPI Indicates ~20%
Consumption & Inflation
Production
With the drop-off in Russian imports, Russia CPI (Consumer Price Index)
many domestic producers have been (%, year-over-year percentage change)
unable to procure supplies and inputs. In
desperation, Putin has effectively 20
legalized grey market and intellectual
property infringement – and at times has
outright encouraged parallel imports.
Putin declared the goods of certain 16
companies exempt from trademark laws,
including electronic components from
manufacturers such as Cisco, Intel,
Motorola, and Siemens as well as 12
industrial goods such as paper, textiles,
ceramics, locomotives, and nuclear
reactors. Despite Putin’s efforts, there is
little evidence that these permissive
parallel import substitution laws are 8
actually having much effect, especially in
sensitive sectors such as aerospace, with
widespread supply shortages and price
inflation across the entire economy. 4
-5%
-10%
Sources: Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute,
Morgan Stanley, Bloomberg, Russian Federal Service of
State Statistics, JPMorgan, Bank of America Global -15%
Research, Deutsche Bank, UBS
-20%
Sep '21 Oct '21 Nov '21 Dec '21 Jan '22 Feb '22 Mar '22 Apr '22 May '22
27
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Russian Domestic
Consumption & Collapse In Car Sales Representative Of Broader Economic Woes
Production
Total Russian Car Sales by Month
Prior to the invasion, an average of (units in thousands of cars)
~100,000 automobiles were sold every
160
month across Russia, but these sales have
collapsed to just a quarter of their prior
volume. The most recent data releases 120
indicate that only 27,000 cars were sold in
the month of June across all of Russia, 80
27.76
driven not only by soaring prices and
deteriorating consumer sentiment but also 40
because of lack of supply. The data release
for foreign automobiles in Russia was 0
even more disastrous. Historically, many Jun '21 Jul '21 Aug '21 Sep '21 Oct '21 Nov '21 Dec '21 Jan '22 Feb '22 Mar '22 Apr '22 May '22 Jun '22
Russians have preferred to drive foreign
automobiles – not only because of prestige
but also due to concerns about safety and
Russian Car Sales in June 2022 by Brand
quality. But in the months after the (% decline year-over-year; foreign brands)
invasion, the purchase of foreign-made
automobiles in Russia has ground to an
almost complete standstill.
0%
Sources: Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute,
Association of European Businesses, Bloomberg, -25%
Russian Federal Service of State Statistics, JPMorgan,
Bank of America Global Research, Deutsche Bank, UBS -50%
-75%
-100%
28
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Russian Domestic Import Substitution With Made-In-Russia Cars? Quite The
Consumption & Opposite
Production
Putin has prioritized import substitution, Russian Domestic Industrial Production Volume of Motor Vehicles and Parts/Accessories
to replace lost foreign imports with (%, year-over-year percentage change, by month)
ramped-up domestic production – but
import substitution has not been May 2022
successful, and Russian innovation lags -54% Parts and Accessories for Motor Vehicles
far behind that of peer countries. Russian
domestic production of automobiles has
-75% Motor Vehicles
plummeted, given the reliance on
international supply chains for not only
raw materials such as steel and machinery, -80 -70 -60 -50 -40 -30 -20 -10 0
but also complex parts such as brakes and
airbags in addition to western technology April 2022
in semiconductors. Even at these minimal
production levels, significant shortcuts are -58% Parts and Accessories for Motor Vehicles
being taken. Russia went so far as to
suspend car production safety -67% Motor Vehicles
requirements in domestic automobile
manufacturing, and many of the cars being -80 -70 -60 -50 -40 -30 -20 -10 0
manufactured post-invasion now lack such
essentials as airbags and anti-lock brakes.
March 2022
Source: Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute,
Russian Federal Service of State Statistics, Bloomberg,
-37% Parts and Accessories for Motor Vehicles
JPMorgan, Bank of America Global Research, Deutsche
Bank, UBS
-52% Motor Vehicles
-25% Manufacturing
Unsustainable Fiscal and Monetary Stimulus And Kremlin Interventions Conceal Structural
6
Economic Weaknesses
Financial Markets Pricing In Sustained Weakness In Real Economy with Liquidity and Credit
7
Contracting
8 Conclusion: Russia’s Economic Vulnerabilities Reveal Key Lessons For The West
33
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Proprietary Yale CELI Russian Business Retreat Data Suggests
Business, Capital, ~40% Of Russian GDP At Risk
Talent Flight
Since Russia’s invasion of Ukraine began Yale CELI List of Companies Curtailing Operations in Russia Contains 40%+ of Russian GDP
in February 2022, the authors have led an
intensive research effort to track the
responses of nearly 1,500 public and
1000+
private companies from across the globe,
with well over 1,000 companies publicly global companies
announcing they are voluntarily curtailing
operations in Russia. The value of the
Russian revenue represented by these
companies and the value of these
companies’ investments in Russia together
exceed $600 billion - meaning the retreat
of well over 1,000 companies in the span
40%+
of three months has almost single-
handedly reversed three decades’ worth of of Russia’s GDP
Russian economic integration with the rest
of the world, while undoing years of
foreign investment into Russia. In total,
these companies, and the Russian
companies which provide services to
them, employ over 5 million Russians, and
the Mayor of Moscow has already
5mm+
expressed concern over unemployment. Russian jobs
Source: Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute, Russian dependent on
Federal Service of State Statistics, Bloomberg, Bank of
America Global Research, UBS, Associated Press foreign investment
34
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Russian Official Central Bank Gauge Shows Quadrupling Of Formal
Macroeconomic Capital Outflows Post-Invasion Amidst Brain Drain
Indicators
The official level of capital outflows Russian Private Sector Capital Outflows Per Central Bank of Russia
indicated by the Bank of Russia is likely (units in $ USD billions)
80
to be a gross underestimate of the actual
level of capital outflows, given strict
capital controls implemented by the 60
Actual capital outflows
Kremlin restricting the amount of wealth
likely significantly higher
Russian citizens can transfer out of the 40
country. By all anecdotal reports, wealthy
Russians are flocking to safe havens in
droves. Many of these Russians have 20
swarmed to financial centers such as
Dubai in the Middle East; the presence of 0
Russian capital inflows in Dubai is so Q1 2021 Q2 2021 Q3 2021 Q4 2021 Q1 2022
significant in magnitude that many local
real estate experts attribute Dubai’s
ballooning property values over the last 4 Exodus of Ultra-High Net Worth And Highly Educated/Skilled Russians Of Particular Significance
months to the influx of new Russian
wealth seeking shelter, with many Dubai
real estate firms reporting 100% and even
200% year-over-year increases in sales to
Unsustainable Fiscal and Monetary Stimulus And Kremlin Interventions Conceal Structural
6
Economic Weaknesses
Financial Markets Pricing In Sustained Weakness In Real Economy with Liquidity and Credit
7
Contracting
8 Conclusion: Russia’s Economic Vulnerabilities Reveal Key Lessons For The West
36
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Russian Ruble Exchange Rate Reflects Stringent Capital
Unsustainable Controls, Low Liquidity, And Artificial Value
Kremlin Policies
The official exchange rate of the ruble Russian Ruble Spot Daily Trading Volumes Across All Official Markets
given the presence of such draconian (units in $ USD billions)
capital controls can be misleading – as the
ruble is, unsurprisingly, trading at 10
dramatically diminished volumes 8
compared to pre-invasion on low liquidity.
6
By many reports, much of this erstwhile low liquidity
trading has migrated to unofficial ruble (elevated black 4
black markets, where the spread between market volumes)
2
the official exchange rate and the actual
exchange rate is equally dramatic – 0
upwards of 20% to 100% higher than the Oct '21 Nov '21 Dec '21 Jan '22 Feb '22 Mar '22 Apr '22 May '22
official exchange rate, in some cases,
given a shortage of obtainable, liquid
dollars within Russia. Even the Bank of Capital Controls on the Ruble Post-Invasion
Russia has admitted that the exchange rate Banned Citizens from Sending Money to Bank Accounts Abroad
is a reflection more of government
policies and a blunt expression of the Suspending Cash Withdrawals from Dollar Banking Accounts Beyond $10,000
country’s trade balance rather than freely
Force Exporters to Exchange 80% of Earnings for Rubles
tradeable liquid FX markets.
Suspend Direct Dollar Conversions for Individuals With Ruble Banking Accounts
Source: Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute,
Morgan Stanley, Bloomberg, Russian Federal Service of Suspend Lending in Dollars
State Statistics, JPMorgan, Bank of America Global
Research, Deutsche Bank, UBS Suspend Dollar Sales Across Russian Banks
Encourage Individuals to Redeem Dollars for Rubles
Companies Must Pay Foreign Dollar Debt in Rubles
37
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Massive, Unsustainable Fiscal Stimulus From Kremlin Masking
Unsustainable Structural Economic Weakness
Kremlin Policies
It is impossible to quantify the exact
magnitude of Putin’s spending – and
Post-Invasion Fiscal Stimulus from Kremlin
where the money goes – with any great
degree of precision, considering, since the Subsidized Loans and Loan Payment Assistance to Companies
invasion started, the Russian government
has intentionally obfuscated budget items Transfer Payments to Affected Industries
under the guise of guarding against
international sanctions. Nevertheless, Subsidized Mortgages and Mortgage Payment Assistance
Putin’s announcements of fiscal measures
provide some sense of the unprecedented
magnitude of Kremlin intervention in Increase in Direct Payments to Individuals, Including Families, Pregnant Women,
helping to prop up the flagging Russian Government Employees, Pensioners, Military, Low-Income
economy. All of this enhanced fiscal
stimulus is on top of presumably vast
military spending, further straining the Recapitalization of Companies by National Wealth Fund
Russian budget.
Nationalization and Recapitalization of Certain Companies
Subsidized Credit Forgiveness/Debt Jubilee
Source: Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute, Subsidized Protection from Bankruptcy and Foreclosure
Morgan Stanley, Russian Federal Service of State
Statistics, Bloomberg, JPMorgan, Bank of America
Global Research, Deutsche Bank, UBS Drawdowns from National Wealth Fund for State Expenditures
Subsidized Infrastructure Development
38
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Kremlin Inundating Economy With Artificial Liquidity To Mask
Unsustainable Economic Weakness
Kremlin Policies
The black-box that is the budget and Russian Government Increase In Fixed Asset Investment Budgets (Infrastructure) in Q1 2022
financing of the Russian state cannot be (shown as year-over-year % percentage change, not seasonally adjusted)
known with 100% precision or certainty –
but certain facts are indisputable. Thanks 40 35% 34%
to a massive wave of fiscal and monetary
stimulus unleashed post-invasion, Russian
state spending and social obligations are 20
now at a magnitude much higher than
before. To sustain this unprecedented level
of spending, any decrease in Russian gas
and oil revenues would force Russia to tap 0
into its “rainy-day” funds even more than Federal Regional
it is already doing, but these reserves are
seemingly already dwindling, with the
prospects for future “top-offs” of these
vital reserves increasingly bleak for Russian Money Supply (M2) 1200
Russia. It appears to be a fiscal path with (units in $ USD billions, not seasonally adjusted)
little margin for error – operating under
the preconception that oil and gas 1000
revenues will only go up. That is the
fundamental bet underlying whether Putin
will run out of cash, or whether he can
sustain these unprecedented levels of 800
fiscal spending.
600
2018 2019 2020 2021 2022
39
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Source: Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute, Morgan Stanley, Russian Federal Service of State Statistics, Bloomberg, JPMorgan, Bank of America Global Research, UBS
Unsustainable Russia’s Foreign Exchange Reserves Bleeding Out Fast
Kremlin Policies
The most obvious challenge facing Putin’s Russian FX Reserves Composition Russian FX Reserves Over Time
rainy-day funds is the fact that of his $600 (shown as % of Russian GDP) (units in $ USD billions)
40
billion in foreign exchange reserves, 650
accumulated from years’ worth of oil and
gas revenues, $300 billion is frozen and 35
out of reach with allied countries across Down $75
the US, Europe and Japan restricting Billion
access. There have been some calls to 30 625
seize this $300 billion to finance the $300 Billion Restricted
reconstruction of Ukraine, calls which are Restricted (USA, EUR,
JPN, etc.)
seemingly louder in European policy 25
circles than in the US – for now, at least.
Putin’s remaining FX reserves are
decreasing at an alarming pace, as Russian 20 600
FX reserves have declined by $75 billion
since the start of the war – a rate which, if
annualized, suggests these reserves may Other (IMF,
Domestic, etc.)
15
be spent down within a few years’ time.
575
China (RMB) 10
(including the $300 billion
in frozen reserves)
5
Gold (in Russia)
550
0 Nov '21 Jan '22 Mar '22 May '22 Jul '22
40 Source: YaleElectronic
Chief Executive
copyLeadership
availableInstitute, Morgan Stanley, Russian Federal Service of State Statistics, Bloomberg, JPMorgan, Bank of America Global Research, UBS
at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Kremlin Drawing Down Rainy Day Funds To Cover Steep Budget
Unsustainable Deficit Despite High Oil Prices
Kremlin Policies
One sign of just how high spending levels Russian Budget Deficit Russian Urals Crude Oil Spot Price
have risen is the fact that Finance Minister (shown as % of Russian GDP) (units in $ USD, price per barrel)
Anton Siluanov has readily acknowledged
that the Russian government budget will 4% 100
likely be in deficit this year by an amount
equivalent to 2% of Russian GDP – 2% 80
compared to previous rosy projections of a
0% 60
surplus, as has been typical the past few
years. Even more interestingly, Siluanov -2% 40
floated the idea of withdrawing funds
from the National Wealth Fund equivalent -4% 20
to a third of the entire fund to pay for this
deficit – a whopping withdrawal which -6% 0
would far surpass previous withdrawals by 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022
many orders. If Russia is running a budget
deficit requiring the drawdown of a third
of its sovereign wealth fund when oil and Russia Drawing Down One-Third of Sovereign Wealth Fund to Cover 2022 Budget Deficit
gas revenues are still relatively strong, the (according to Reuters and Russian sources)
financial picture which is emerging of the
Kremlin’s financing does not seem
promising at all. In fact, the picture seems
(including the $300 billion
to be of a Kremlin which is fast running
out of money, despite intentional in frozen reserves)
obfuscation.
41 Source: YaleElectronic
Chief Executive
copyLeadership
availableInstitute, Morgan Stanley, Russian Federal Service of State Statistics, Bloomberg, JPMorgan, Bank of America Global Research, UBS
at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Russian Economy In Crisis Theme #7: Russian Financial Markets
Unsustainable Fiscal and Monetary Stimulus And Kremlin Interventions Conceal Structural
6
Economic Weaknesses
Financial Markets Pricing In Sustained Weakness In Real Economy with Liquidity and Credit
7
Contracting
8 Conclusion: Russia’s Economic Vulnerabilities Reveal Key Lessons For The West
42
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Frozen Out Of International Capital Markets, Capital-Starved
Russian Financial Russian Financial Markets Pricing In Sustained Weakness
Markets
Financial markets are useful not only as an Benchmark MOEX Russia Stock Index 4500 Russian Access to International Capital
indicator of current financial and liquidity Markets Since Start of Invasion
conditions, but also as a discounting
mechanism for understanding what is
priced into the future. If the performance
4000
zero
of Russian financial markets across asset
classes this year is to be given any weight, equity (stock) issuances
then the message seems to be clear: the
situation is dire now, and the situation is
dire moving forward – especially with 3500
Russian entities frozen out of international
capital markets.
2500
*all foreigners still
completely prohibited (including $300 billion in
from transacting on frozen reserves)
Source: Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute,
Bloomberg, JPMorgan, Bank of America Global
Research, Deutsche Bank, UBS
Moscow Stock Exchange
Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul
2000 one sovereign debt default
'21 '21 '21 '21 '21 '21 '22 '22 '22 '22 '22 '22 '22
43
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Major Russian Energy Giants Are Some Of The Worst Performing
Russian Financial Stocks On The Moscow Stock Exchange This Year
Markets
Rosneft Stock Performance (ROSN) Gazprom Stock Performance (GAZP)
The benchmark Russian equity index is
one of the single worst performers of any 700 450
major country index in the entire world
this year, falling nearly ~50% since the
start of the invasion. This reflects purely
domestic sentiment from Russian
600
investors alone: if foreign investors were
allowed to liquidate their positions, selling
pressure would be several degrees higher
across the entire Moscow Stock Exchange. 350
What is even more striking is that, in 500
examining single stock performance
across the Moscow Stock Exchange,
several of the worst performing single
stocks are those of Rosneft, the Russian
state oil giant, and Gazprom, the state gas 400
giant – and some of the erstwhile crown 250
jewels of the Russian economy. Clearly,
financial markets are unwilling to touch
these companies with a ten-foot pole in 300
the expectation that Putin is cannibalizing
what had been credible, profit-making
companies to advance his geopolitical
agenda.
Source: Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute, Moscow 200 150
Stock Exchange, Bloomberg, Russian Federal Service of State
Statistics, JPMorgan, Bank of America Global Research, UBS Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul
'21 '21 '21 '22 '22 '22 '22 '22 '22 '22 '21 '21 '21 '22 '22 '22 '22 '22 '22 '22
44
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Credit Not Flowing Through To Liquidity-Challenged Small And
Russian Financial Medium Russian Businesses
Markets
Debt Held By Small And Medium Businesses New Loans Originated To SME Businesses
The massive Kremlin-backed liquidity and (units in billions of $ rubles ) (units in millions of $ rubles )
credit injections which prevented a 8 1400
financial crisis in the days following the
invasion have been insufficient to spur
true credit formation and risk-taking by
small and medium sized businesses. In
fact, despite the permissive credit
environment fostered by the Kremlin and 1200
state subsidization of various forms of
loans including mortgages and business 7
loans, loans originated to small and
medium businesses have actually fallen
dramatically in spite of these subsidies. It
seems no amount of Kremlin incentives 1000
are enough to spur businesses to
underwrite new investments and capital
expenditure in this political and economic
climate – a reflection of what Russian 6
business leaders truly think about their
own economy, and the outlook for future 800
growth (or more aptly, contraction).
Unsustainable Fiscal and Monetary Stimulus And Kremlin Interventions Conceal Structural
6
Economic Weaknesses
Financial Markets Pricing In Sustained Weakness In Real Economy with Liquidity and Credit
7
Contracting
8 Conclusion: Russia’s Economic Vulnerabilities Reveal Key Lessons For The West
46
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Conclusions
- Russia’s strategic positioning as a commodities exporter has irrevocably deteriorated, as it now deals from a position of weakness with the
loss of its erstwhile main markets, and faces steep challenges executing a “pivot to Asia” with non-fungible exports such as piped gas
- Despite some lingering leakiness, Russian imports have largely collapsed, and the country faces stark challenges securing crucial inputs,
parts, and technology from hesitant trade partners, leading to widespread supply shortages within its domestic economy
- Despite Putin’s delusions of self-sufficiency and import substitution, Russian domestic production has come to a complete standstill with
no capacity to replace lost businesses, products and talent; the hollowing out of Russia’s domestic innovation and production base has led
to soaring prices and consumer angst
- As a result of the business retreat, Russia has lost companies representing ~40% of its GDP, reversing nearly all of three decades’ worth of
foreign investment and buttressing unprecedented simultaneous capital and population flight in a mass exodus of Russia’s economic base
47
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193
Conclusions – Continued
- Putin is resorting to patently unsustainable, dramatic fiscal and monetary intervention to smooth over these structural economic
weaknesses, which has already sent his government budget into deficit for the first time in years and drained his foreign reserves even with
high energy prices – and Kremlin finances are in much, much more dire straits than conventionally understood
- Russian domestic financial markets, as an indicator of both present conditions and future outlook, are the worst performing markets in the
entire world this year despite strict capital controls, and have priced in sustained, persistent weakness within the economy with liquidity
and credit contracting – in addition to Russia being substantively cut off from international financial markets, limiting its ability to tap
into pools of capital needed for the revitalization of its crippled economy
- The Kyiv School of Economics and McFaul-Yermak Working Group under former US Ambassador to Russia Mike McFaul have led the
way in proposing additional sanctions measures across individual sanctions, energy sanctions and financial sanctions. Looking ahead,
there is no path out of economic oblivion for Russia as long as the allied countries remain unified in maintaining and increasing sanctions
pressure against Russia
- Defeatist headlines arguing that Russia’s economy has bounced back are simply not factual - the facts are that, by any metric and on any
level, the Russian economy is reeling, and now is not the time to step on the brakes
48
Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4167193