IMF predicts Russian economy to rebound in 2023

The Bell

  • The typically conservative IMF was much more upbeat than usual in its most recent forecasts for the global economy — for which it anticipates 2.9% growth (up 0.2 percentage points from its October forecast). Russia’s forecast was upgraded even more than the global figures: in October, the IMF predicted a 2.3% fall in Russian GDP in 2023; now it is talking about 0.3% growth. In 2024, they believe Russia’s GDP will increase by as much as 2.1%.
  • The IMF’s latest figures are the most optimistic 2023 forecast around. They are well above the February consensus among Russian economists (decline of 1.5%) and the official projections of the Russian authorities: the Ministry of Economic Development currently predicts a fall of 0.8%, while the Central Bank expects a drop of up to 4%.
  • IMF economists explain this optimism as based on the stability of Russian oil exports. “At the current oil price cap level, Russian crude oil export volumes are not expected to be significantly affected, with Russian trade continuing to be redirected from sanctioning to non-sanctioning countries,” the report stated.
  • If Russia’s economy is to live up to the IMF’s expectations, output needs to increase by 0.4% every quarter from the fourth quarter of last year to the fourth quarter of 2023, according to a Telegram channel run by Bloomberg Economics’ Alexander Isakov. The economist thinks this is realistic. “The IMF’s figures seem persuasive.”
  • Business activity in Russia continues to recover. According to an updated State Statistics Service (Rosstat) estimate and the Central Bank’s figures, in the third quarter the economy turned a corner (+0.86% compared with the previous quarter). Russia’s economy moves into 2023 with a higher level of activity than was expected in the spring, Central Bank analysts wrote last month. Demand has been underpinned by government spending.
  • However, it’s important to point out that the economic recovery is patchy. Constraining factors include a growing preference for saving rather than spending among the general population, difficulties with maintaining imported equipment and staff shortages. In November, almost half of Russian businesses (45%) reported staffing problems. The dwindling workforce and the significant wartime brain drain could result in fierce competition to hire remaining talent. And that will likely push up salaries faster and bring inflationary risks.
  • “The IMF scenario is clearly the most optimistic of the possible outcomes that have some chance of happening in 2023,” said Dmitry Polevoi, investment director at Loko-Invest. “From our point of view, GDP will still fall by 1.5-2.5% in 2023 due to weak demand at home and abroad, coupled with high levels of uncertainty.”

Why the world should care

The IMF figures are plausible if Russia’s economy does not suffer any more major shocks in 2023 — for example, a sharp fall in energy prices or a major geo-political defeat. The IMF updates its predictions several times a year and further corrections are likely.


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