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Why Russia’s economy is unlikely to collapse even if oil prices fall | Phillip Inman

1 day ago
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Pacing inside the Kremlin last weekend, as news feeds churned out minute-by-minute reports of Donald’s Trump’s Venezuelan coup, Vladimir Putin may have been wondering what it would mean for the price of oil.Crude oil has lubricated the Russian economy for decades – far more than gas exports to Europe – and so the threat of falling oil prices, prompted by US plans for control of Venezuela’s rigs, will have been a source of concern.Opinion is divided on how quickly the South American country’s creaking oil industry can be revived.But some analysts believe that Venezuela, home to the world’s largest proven reserves, could be pumping millions of additional barrels as early as this year, hitting the global price and squeezing Russia’s income.US sanctions on Rosneft and Lukoil last year and a rise in the rouble, depressing income from oil sales in dollars, have already reduced receipts for Moscow.

Optimists argue that after four years of war in Ukraine, Putin is increasingly vulnerable because Russia’s financial position is precarious,A fall in oil prices, they say, would have a catastrophic effect on his ability to fund the war and continue grinding down Ukrainian resistance,They portray the Russian economy as a house of cards, ready to collapse if only the right gust of economic pressure could be directed at Moscow,Economic growth, spurred by government military spending, has slowed to almost zero after the Kremlin sought to calm the inflation caused by that same economic expansion,The International Monetary Fund predicted growth of 0.

6% in 2025 and 1% in 2026.Interest rates are high at almost 20% and taxes are due to rise again this year.Unemployment has fallen to almost 2%, reflecting a severe labour shortage as young men are drafted into the army amid falling birthrates and an exodus of middle-income families to the west.Household incomes, which have grown in response to higher welfare spending, are now expected to stagnate.A paper by Marek Dabrowski, an analyst at the Brussels-based thinktank Bruegel, says the latest budget cuts have transferred from Moscow to the regions and reduced pension spending, with education also facing cuts.

Business leaders complain there is little incentive to invest in such an environment.Some point to Iran, where a combination of sanctions and targeted military strikes has brought the economy to its knees, leading to food shortages and riots that threaten to topple the authoritarian regime.Could the same fate await Russia if sanctions are tightened and oil prices fall, forcing Putin to retreat behind the old borders while he attempts to quell internal strife?Last month, a group of economists gathered at the Brookings Institution in Washington to explore how tougher and more dynamic sanctions could further damage Russia’s war effort.Since the full-scale invasion of Ukraine in early 2022, Moscow has bought a huge secondhand fleet of more than 400 vessels to ship oil to Turkey, India and a host of other countries.That “shadow fleet” has shrunk since 2024 to about half its former capacity, forcing Russia to rely on European-insured vessels to ship its oil.

If European financial centres – London chief among them – were to take a tougher line on what they insure, Russian oil revenues could be severely hit.Yet this analysis ignores the successful rewiring of the economy by Putin’s administration, which has proved more adept in its handling of domestic politics and the government’s finances than it did the military in the first three years of the war.Russia can, and should, be hurt financially by further sanctions.But European leaders and Ukraine’s valuable allies in the US Congress, who have done so much to prevent Trump from siding wholeheartedly with his kindred spirit Putin, should not delude themselves into thinking that the Russian economy is on the brink of collapse.While economic growth has slowed to a near standstill, the broader strategy resembles a medically induced coma – designed to insulate the patient from unwanted outside interference.

As optimists note, much of the government’s reserves are spent and oil revenues have fallen from 50% of state income to 25%.Yet Putin has found internal resources to fill the void, chiefly through higher taxes on households and businesses.Richard Connolly, at the Royal United Services Institute thinktank, says: “The Kremlin has succeeded in selling the war, not as a battle with its near neighbour – its brothers and sisters in Ukraine – but as a war with the west.”On the impact of sanctions so far, he adds: “We are not near the economy being a decisive factor in the Kremlin’s thinking about how to pursue the war.”Russia’s debt-to-GDP ratio is just below 20%, while the annual spending deficit is about to hit 3.

5% – modest by international standards, particularly when compared with the UK’s 11% deficit in the year Covid hit and a debt-to-GDP ratio of about 95%.Inflation soared after the invasion but has since been tamed, falling towards 6%, only modestly higher than the central bank target of 4%.There is little doubt that Putin is turning the Russian economy into a junkyard, full of ageing and increasingly dysfunctional factories.He is milking it to aid the war effort without a care for the long-term consequences.But in the short term – this year and perhaps next – he can continue to fund the conflict without fearing economic collapse.

China remains a friend and buyer of oil, while North Korea supplies people and kit, even if India and other beneficiaries of trade with Russia turn away under a tougher sanctions regime.Ukraine, meanwhile, has the money to continue for between 18 months and two years after the promise of €90bn from the EU.Putin, for his part, has the reserves to keep paying young men and their families to fight on.On Friday, Russia launched hypersonic Oreshnik missiles at western Ukraine in a stark escalation of the conflict.The message for Europe is clear: it must help Ukraine push back harder militarily, ignoring Putin’s empty nuclear threats, while tightening the tourniquet on Russian trade.

Four years of weak sanctions gave Putin time to reorganise.A tougher stance on trade may not trigger an economic collapse but Europe needs to work every angle to bring the war to an end.
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How common is violence against NHS staff in England and what is being done to stop it?

A Guardian investigation into violence and sexual harm by patients against NHS staff has revealed tens of thousands of alleged incidents reported over the past three years. Here is what we know from the findings.The Health and Safety Executive (HSE) defines work-related violence as “any incident in which a person is abused, threatened or assaulted in circumstances relating to their work”. Under the Assaults on Emergency Workers (Offences) Act from 2018 anyone who attacks an emergency worker could face a maximum two-year prison sentence. An assault may include pushing, shoving or spitting, as well as fear of an attack

about 11 hours ago
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Circumcision classed as possible child abuse in draft CPS document

Circumcision is to be classed as a potential form of child abuse under new guidance for prosecutors, amid concerns from judges and coroners about deaths and serious harms caused by the procedure.A draft document by the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) on “honour-based abuse, forced marriages, and harmful practices”, classes circumcision as a potential crime alongside breast flattening, virginity testing, hymenoplasty and exorcisms.The wording of the document, seen by the Guardian, has alarmed some religious groups, with Jewish and Muslim leaders defending the cultural importance of the practice.The draft CPS guidance states that, unlike female genital mutilation, “there is not a specific criminal offence of carrying out male circumcision”.“However, this can be a painful and harmful practice, if carried out incorrectly or in inappropriate circumstances

1 day ago
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United against hatred: the Labour MP and ex-Tory MP bringing communities together

They are nursing their cups of tea on opposing sides of the table, and sit on opposing sides of the party political divide, but Gurinder Singh Josan and Kris Hopkins find common cause when it comes to the rise of populism, 1970s-style racism and community division – and finding ways to resist it.Josan, 53, is a Labour MP; Hopkins, 62, a former Tory MP. It’s bracing how different they are: different politics, different pasts, different manners, different modes of expression, everything is different, but on this issue at least they have ended up under the same bannerBoth are trustees of Hope Unlimited Charitable Trust, one of the Guardian 2025 appeal’s five partner charities. The appeal is raising funds for practical grassroots voluntary projects that build hope, tolerance and trust as an antidote to division, hatred and despair.Josan’s interest was sparked as a student at Royal Holloway, University of London in the 1990s

1 day ago
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It’s not too late to donate to our appeal that has raised £900k for charities tackling hate

The Guardian’s 2025 charity appeal launched a few weeks ago against a backdrop of creeping nastiness and social division: the return of 1970s-style racist abuse, the demonisation of refugees and the resurgence of far-right marches in Britain’s streets.Our aim was to raise money and profile for charities that provide an antidote to hatred and othering: whose vital grassroots work is about bringing communities together, establishing common human bonds regardless of skin colour, culture or faith.The theme was hope in unhopeful times. Your response has been characteristically generous. So far we have together raised an incredible £900,000

1 day ago
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NHS staff face ‘national emergency’ as patient violence hits 285 incidents a day

Nurses, doctors and paramedics are reporting tens of thousands of violent and sexual assaults by patients every year, amid warnings that the abuse of NHS staff has become a national crisis.More than 295,000 incidents of physical violence and aggression by patients against staff were recorded by 212 NHS trusts in England between 2022 and 2025, freedom of information requests by the Guardian found.Healthcare unions warned of a spike in assaults on staff over Christmas and the New Year. A man attacked and injured six staff and patients with a crowbar in Newton community hospital in Merseyside last week. He has been arrested and detained under the Mental Health Act, according to Merseyside police

1 day ago
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‘Spat at, pushed, punched’: medics tell of soaring levels of violence in hospitals

A Guardian call-out to NHS staff in England to share their experiences of violence in hospitals has revealed that doctors, nurses, paramedics and managers are being overwhelmed by a torrent of physical assaults and sexual abuse by patients.Most respondents said they had little faith in the NHS to tackle the scale and severity of this abuse, which included being attacked with weapons, including knives and chairs. Many staff felt there was no point in reporting physical or sexual harm because perpetrators faced no real comeback from the NHS or the police.Chloe, 29, a resident doctor in an acute medical unit at a London hospital, said she had frequently dealt with abuse and threats since completing her training just over a year ago. “Patients have told me to fuck off, and that they’ll ‘sue the shit out of me’,” she said

1 day ago
politicsSee all
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Zarah Sultana’s Your Party membership launch may be ‘criminal’ matter for police, ICO says

2 days ago
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Reform UK accused of betraying election pledges after council tax rises

2 days ago
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It is Labour’s party machine that is out of touch | Letters

2 days ago
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UK politics: Reform UK mayoral candidate apologises for Lammy ‘go home’ tweet – as it happened

2 days ago
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Lib Dems call on Reform MPs to donate income from X to charity amid Grok row

2 days ago
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Home Office tells Gaza academic his bid to bring family to UK not urgent

3 days ago