Business | Under siege

Russian businesses are beginning to bear the cost of war

Soaring interest rates, a plunging currency and labour shortages are biting harder

People walk past to an electronic panel, promoting the contract service in Russian armed forces, with sign reads "Our profession is to defend the Fatherland" in a shopping mall in Moscow, Russia.
Photograph: Getty Images

For MORE than two years most Russian businesses carried on unscathed by the war in Ukraine. A surge in defence spending and subsidised loans for consumers and firms propped up spending at home, even as sanctions curtailed access to foreign markets and inflation jumped. Western companies from Volkswagen, a German carmaker, to Shell, a Dutch oil giant, sold their Russian operations to local enterprises. After an initial tumble, the MOEX, an index of Russian stocks, steadily recovered (see chart).

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This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Under siege”

From the December 7th 2024 edition

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