Russia Hikes Interest Rates To 21%, Highest Since 2003

 

Russia’s central bank hiked interest rates to 21 per cent on Friday, taking borrowing costs to their highest level in more than 20 years as Moscow’s Ukraine offensive has triggered rapid price rises at home.

The rise takes rates above an emergency level introduced in February 2022 — just after Moscow ordered troops into Ukraine — and to their highest since 2003 as the regulator battles to stem the economic fallout of the conflict.

“Further tightening of monetary policy is required to ensure the return of inflation to the target and reduce inflation expectations,” the bank said in a statement announcing the increase.

Without mentioning the Ukraine offensive, it directly blamed high government spending for inflation and said it could hike rates yet again.

“Additional fiscal spending and the related expansion of the federal budget deficit in 2024 have pro-inflationary effects,” it said.

Inflation has surged amid a massive increase in outlays on the Ukraine offensive that has triggered labour shortages across the economy.

Price rises were running at 8.6 per cent on an annual basis in September, more than double the official 4.0 per cent target.

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Russian lawmakers voted Thursday to increase defence expenditure by almost 30 per cent next year, another sign Moscow is not planning to halt its spending on the offensive, grinding through its third year, any time soon.

The spending boom has created strong growth despite an unprecedented package of Western sanctions that Washington hoped would cripple the Russian economy.

The International Monetary Fund this week raised its growth forecast for Russia in 2024 to 3.6 per cent.

 

– Inflation woes –

But hundreds of thousands of men have been called up to fight, fled the country or been recruited by the booming domestic arms industry — leading to a cycle of spiralling wages and prices that the Central Bank has warned undermines stability.

And analysts say higher interest rates are having less of an impact in cooling inflation because so much of the economy is reliant on government spending related to the offensive — outlays that are not easily influenced by borrowing costs.

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The Kremlin permits the central bank a degree of independence when it comes to managing the domestic economy.

Governor Elvira Nabiullina, a former Putin aide who is highly respected in Moscow, has softly criticised the government’s economic policies related to the conflict, without commenting on the offensive itself.

Now sanctioned by the United States, she had won plaudits in the West before the military campaign for her stewardship of the Russian economy and clean-up of its banking sector.

– BRICS setback –

Russia’s official borrowing costs have not been above 20 per cent since 2003.

They regularly topped 100 per cent throughout the 1990s, a decade of economic volatility and hardship following the collapse of the Soviet Union.

The first years of President Vladimir Putin’s rule in the 2000s saw an oil-led boom and rising wealth.

But his conflict in Ukraine has threatened Moscow’s future prosperity, cutting it off from lucrative Western export markets and much of the global financial system.

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Putin had hoped to advance plans for alternative international payment systems at the BRICS summit in Kazan this week, the largest diplomatic gathering in Russia since the start of the offensive.

But speaking Thursday, he indicated little progress had been made on talks over launching a possible competitor to the Belgium-based SWIFT financial messaging system.

“As for SWIFT and any alternatives, we have not created and are not creating any alternatives,” Putin told reporters at the end of the summit.

“One of the key problems today is the problem of payments, that is why we are moving towards the use of national currencies,” he said.

“As for a unified BRICS currency, we are not considering that question at the moment,” he added.

 

AFP

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