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Unbalancing Act. What the 2025 Budget Says About the Russian Economy
Episode 39

Unbalancing Act. What the 2025 Budget Says About the Russian Economy

Podcast host Alex Gabuev is joined by Alexandra Prokopenko, a fellow at Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center, and by Alexander Kolyandr, a financial analyst and non-resident senior scholar at the Center for European Policy Analysis, to discuss the state budget for 2025/26 and the prospects of the Russian economy in coming years.

Carnegie Politika Podcast · Alexander Gabuev, Alexandra Prokopenko, Alexander Kolyandr

October 1, 202429m 42s

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Show Notes

Despite predictions that the Russian military budget had reached its peak, the recently announced 2025/26 budget shows otherwise. To keep the war machine oiled and functioning, the Russian government is once again raising military spending substantially to levels not seen since the collapse of the Soviet Union. Some in the Russian elites believe that ongoing high demand in the military industrial complex will expedite economic growth. Several miscalculations by the West and a lack of massive military achievements from Ukraine have allowed the Russian economy to withstand the pressure of sanctions. But how sustainable is the current economic strategy, and how long can Putin fund his atrocious war while damaging crucial yet vulnerable economic sectors like healthcare, education, and science?

Read Kolyandr's piece on Western sanctions for Carnegie Politika:https://carnegieendowment.org/russia-eurasia/politika/2024/09/russia-eu-sanctions-trade?lang=en¢er=russia-eurasia

Host — Alex Gabuev

Guests — Alexandra Prokopenko, Alexander Kolyandr

Producer — Dmitrii Kuznetsov

Music by Liam Gordon
 

Topics

russiabudgetsactionswareconomyspending