In a statement Tuesday, following its action at an emergency meeting, the Central Bank did not mention the drop in the value of the ruble. Instead, the bank attributed the interest-rate hike to “inflationary pressure” caused by “steady growth in domestic demand surpassing the capacity to expand output.”
While the bank insisted Monday that the sudden depreciation would not harm the country’s overall financial stability, Putin’s economic adviser Maxim Oreshkin appeared to criticize the bank, writing in an op-ed for the state news agency Tass that the source of the weakened ruble was “soft monetary policy.”
“The Central Bank has all the tools to normalize the situation in the near future,” Oreshkin wrote.
Less clear is how the country plans to tackle its widening budget deficit and significant labor shortages, which have contributed to the spike in inflation.
More than 40 percent of Russian industrial enterprises reported a shortage of workers last month, according to a survey — an acceleration of a trend that has been building since September, when Putin launched a nationwide military mobilization to shore up Russian forces in Ukraine.
The Russian economist Sergei Guriev, who is provost of Sciences Po university in France, said the ruble’s fall against major world currencies was “politically important,” since it would be felt immediately by the Russian public.
“The difference between 50 rubles to the dollar in 2020, and 100 today is something every citizen can observe … even those who are convinced and brainwashed by TV propaganda,” Guriev said.
“When the Central Bank increases the interest rate, that also hits Russian borrowers, firms and households with outstanding loans,” Guriev continued. “This will slow down the Russian economy and therefore undermine the increase in the real incomes and purchasing power of Russian citizens.”
The new depreciation marks a reversal, he said, bringing about “a reality where Russia no longer exports a lot and imports very little.” A Western boycott of most Russian oil started to be felt only at the beginning of this year, he added.
Guriev said the recent mutiny against Russia’s military leadership by Wagner mercenary boss Yevgeniy Prigozhin, as well as the expropriation of Western companies still operating in Russia, also contributed to capital outflows and helped to weaken the ruble.
Sergey Aleksashenko, a former Russian deputy finance minister, told The Post that the ruble’s devaluation had been caused by a “growing mistrust in Putin’s economic policy and the country’s future.” The president’s order to replace dollar and euro payments for Russian exports with “friendly currencies” had reduced the supply of currencies needed for imports, he said.
Some economists played down the sudden drop in the ruble, suggesting that it represented a consistent pattern of depreciation and inflation acceleration since the invasion, rather than a spontaneous crisis.
“Perhaps the current acceleration will lead to a tsunami depreciation, but this has not happened in the past,” said Oleg Itskhoki, a professor of economics at UCLA. “So it is not very likely, although not impossible, unless it triggers panic and a mass switch of savings from rubles to dollars by the broader public.”
Guriev also said he did not consider the recent developments to be critically damaging to the Russian economy.
“I think it’s normal that the Russian Central Bank stays committed to its inflation target and raises interest rates when it sees that inflation is getting out of control,” he said. “On the other hand, the question is to what extent further depreciation is possible if the Western coalition can tighten the sanctions pressure on the Russian economy.”
It is not the first time the bank has taken emergency measures during a crisis. At the end of February 2022, just days after the invasion, the bank raised the key rate to 20 percent from 9.5 percent.
And in 2014, after Russia’s illegal annexation of Ukraine’s Crimea and an initial battery by Western sanctions, the bank raised the country’s interest rate to 17 percent from 10.5 percent.
Such increases, which rank among the largest ever announced by the bank, echo measures taken during the 1990s when Russia defaulted on its debt and devalued the ruble.
Elsewhere in Russia, a Moscow court on Tuesday convicted retired Russian military intelligence colonel Vladimir Kvachkov — a vehement pro-war figure — of discrediting the military, as the Kremlin seeks to bring nationalist pro-war critics to heel.
The 74-year-old retired colonel — who served in the military intelligence agency the GRU and who has called for a tougher approach in the war against Ukraine — told the court that Putin, Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu and Chief of the Russian General Staff Valery Gerasimov were discrediting the military, before Judge Alesya Orekhova sharply cut him off, the Russian media outlet Mediazona reported from the court.
Kvachkov was fined 40,000 rubles, about $408, reinforcing the message from Russian authorities that they will no longer will tolerate criticism of the military’s conduct of the war.
The case followed last month’s indictment of the pro-war nationalist Igor Girkin, who was detained on charges of inciting extremism over his criticism of Putin and his demands that Russia take a harsher approach in the war.
Meanwhile, in Ukraine, Russia attacked the western region of Lviv with cruise missiles in the early morning hours Tuesday, according to regional governor Maksym Kozytskyi. He said that at least 20 houses were destroyed, including one functioning as a kindergarten. Fifteen people were injured, including a 10-year-old and a 72-year-old, he said.
In Britain on Tuesday, three suspected spies for Russia who were living and working in the U.K. were charged in a major national security investigation, the BBC reported, describing them as Bulgarian nationals.
London’s Metropolitan Police said in a statement that five people were arrested in February and that three were later charged under the Official Secrets Act with possessing “false identity documents with improper intention.”
The police did not specify what the documents were. The investigation found that the suspects were working for Russian security services and had passports, identity cards and other documents for Britain, Bulgaria, France, Italy, Spain, Croatia, Slovenia, Greece and the Czech Republic, the BBC reported.
The police identified the three people charged as Orlin Roussev, 45, Bizer Dzhambazov, 41, and Katrin Ivanova, 31. Dzhambazov and Ivanova shared the same residential address.
Ebel reported from Tunis. Karla Adam in London and Robyn Dixon in Riga, Latvia, contributed to this report.