A
year ago, Russia's economy was growing by about 1.5% and President Vladimir
Putin was preparing to host the Sochi Winter Olympics.
Fast forward 12 months: Moscow is
trying to prevent a currency crisis
turning into an economic catastrophe, and finds itself more isolated than at
any other point in the last 25 years. The crisis carries big risks for Western banks
and companies that do business with Russia. So how did it come to this?
Fragile
foundations: Forecasts for Russian growth were being downgraded well before the Ukraine crisis sent investors running for
the exits.
Putin had left the Russian economy overly
reliant on exports of oil and gas. Calls for greater action to scale back
government involvement in the economy, tackle corruption and stimulate local
investment had largely gone unheeded.
Meddling
in Ukraine: Russia's decision to back
separatist rebels following the removal of Ukraine's pro-Moscow government had markets worried
before Moscow formally annexed Crimea in March.
Worried by rising tension between
Moscow and the West, the ruble and Russian stocks hit the skids in late
January. The flight of capital accelerated.
The West
acts: After months of largely symbolic
sanctions aimed at Russian officials -- including asset freezes and travel bans -- first the U.S., then Europe, were stung into serious action by
the shooting down of a Malaysian airliner over eastern Ukraine in June, and
Moscow's continued support for rebels blamed for the crash.
They took measures to prevent
Russia's biggest banks and companies raising funds in the West, and targeted
the country's key energy and weapons industries
with restrictions.
Russia
retaliates: Moscow responded by banning various food imports
from Europe and the U.S. That hurt European food exporters, and dealt another
blow to investor sentiment.
But it also drove up food prices in Russia, further fueling inflation that was already on
the rise due to the devaluation of the ruble.
Oil
collapses: At about the same time global energy
prices started to fall, completing the perfect storm for Russia.
The oil crash accelerated last month
when OPEC decided not to cut its production target. Assuming oil holds at
current levels -- and that's far from certain -- Russia's economy will contract by about 5% next year.
That's as bad as it got during the country's financial crisis of 1998.
Source:http://money.cnn.com/2014/12/16/news/economy/russia-crisis-evolution/
@MarkThompsonCNN December 16, 2014: 10:19 AM ET
LONDON (CNNMoney)
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