← Home ← Back to /pol/

Thread 513815120

33 posts 16 images 18 unique posters /pol/
Anonymous (ID: xet0upDa) Canada No.513815120 >>513815287 >>513815405 >>513816252 >>513816921 >>513822410 >>513822516
How long can Russia realistically keep it going with their economy continously going down?
Anonymous (ID: W8awKVo5) No.513815287 >>513815466
>>513815120 (OP)
There is no change since 2023 lol
Anonymous (ID: UG5q87cw) United States No.513815405
>>513815120 (OP)
CREA appears to be a Finnish environmental organization. Very unbiased on this topic!
Anonymous (ID: 0SXoAXhg) Belgium No.513815466 >>513815956 >>513816277 >>513816414
>>513815287
I just finished a piece on how russia will surrender any moment now because only 1.2% growth projected, slightly more than the eurozone. Reading 4 years of cope like this never gets old
Anonymous (ID: W8awKVo5) No.513815956
>>513815466
For a regular person it is not even noticeable, especially if you compare to 90s crisises. Oligarchs lost alot of money but who cares.
Anonymous (ID: 8JslgcSj) United States No.513816038
Economy posters are constantly wrong. Why?
Anonymous (ID: 3/roBN0I) Mexico No.513816252
>>513815120 (OP)
don't worry, it will al go up with the rare minerals from eastern ukraine, and when euros rebuild the gas lines after this kike war ends with nafo coping
Anonymous (ID: xet0upDa) Canada No.513816277 >>513816549 >>513816824 >>513817196 >>513819683 >>513823025
>>513815466
9% inflation this year even with their interest rate being one of the highest in the world
Anonymous (ID: W8awKVo5) No.513816414
>>513815466
the bigger problem for an average russian are sanctions that does not really do much to the economy. Like flight bans or online services restrictions. It only brings isolation and just makes people pissed off of inconveniences. Like why the fuck playstation bans purchases with russian ips while most of the clients are not even 18 and able to vote. It just makes people hate the west, even the ones who were against the war initially.
Anonymous (ID: 4sbJt20B) United States No.513816549 >>513816666 >>513816737
>>513816277
>t.
Anonymous (ID: xet0upDa) Canada No.513816666
>>513816549
Exactly, we can't keep it up either so how long can Russia
Are you expecting me to defend this shithole or something?
Anonymous (ID: U9AQ7jtJ) United States No.513816674 >>513816942
Russia did the smart thing and told boomers to fuck off. The first country that can truly be free from the boomer menace will win.
Anonymous (ID: U9AQ7jtJ) United States No.513816737
>>513816549
Reminder that inflated real estate is a massive wealth transfer from the young to boomers and banks.
Anonymous (ID: W8awKVo5) No.513816824
>>513816277
9% is low for Russia, it was like 1000% ones back in the Yeltzin days when russia was full of "economic advisers" from US. Usual inflation during Putin is 15% or so. 9% is realistic inflation even for europe nowdays if you really compare food and real estate prices and salaries, and not just check EU department of statistics reports.
Anonymous (ID: U9AQ7jtJ) United States No.513816826
Every single developed country is being held hostage by boomers.
Anonymous (ID: xYR4RmhW) United States No.513816898
russia already lost and is dead. the only thing that exists is brainless zombie russia
Anonymous (ID: XnhG+N1o) Germany No.513816921 >>513817046 >>513817797
>>513815120 (OP)
It's not going down fast enough. Our economy is in free fall. We will hit the bottom before them. This is the reason for the panic among the EU cunts. They know that Russians can bear A LOT more suffering than EU citizens.
Anonymous (ID: xet0upDa) Canada No.513816942
>>513816674
Are they actually spending less per capita on them or are they just dying off from alcoholism faster than the west
Anonymous (ID: xet0upDa) Canada No.513817046 >>513822765 >>513823847
>>513816921
Germans elected retards for decades. Even if the war ended right now its fucked there.
Anonymous (ID: +JduH7QC) Russian Federation No.513817196 >>513817298 >>513820429
>>513816277
That's fairly average here historically and substantially better than in the previous SMO years. The rate also started coming down this summer. Of all the wishful thinking scernarios about Russia's imminent demise the economic collapse is imho the silliest one.
Anonymous (ID: xet0upDa) Canada No.513817298 >>513818267
>>513817196
How is your everyday life there? Where do you live? If you never turned on the news would you even know you're at war?
Anonymous (ID: W8awKVo5) No.513817797
>>513816921
everything that turkey buys it resells to EU for higher price, they have enough supply from Azerbaijan for themselves
Anonymous (ID: +JduH7QC) Russian Federation No.513818267
>>513817298
>How is your everyday life there?
Pretty ordinary desu.
>Where do you live?
Moscow, but I oscillate between that and my home city in middle Volga every so often.
>If you never turned on the news would you even know you're at war?
Depending on where one lives there might be some GPS jamming and drone attacks, but that's probably about it.
Anonymous (ID: Jp8EnFOj) United States No.513819683
>>513816277
"Russians refuse to believe Rosstat's inflation slowdown.

Four weeks of price declines in a row and a slowdown in inflation to 8.55% year-on-year have not convinced Russians that price growth is slowing down. Inflation expectations of the population have grown to 13.5% in August from 13% in July, and the price increase felt by people has grown to 16.1% from 15%, according to a poll by the Public Opinion Foundation commissioned by the Central Bank (it was conducted from August 4 to 14).

This is how Russians reacted to the increase in housing and communal services tariffs from July 1: in early August, they received their first bills for the new rates. The 13-15% increase turned out to be higher than usual.

"We don't believe it, the Russians say," former Deputy Chairman of the Central Bank Sergei Aleksashenko comments on the survey results.

Economist Dmitry Polevoy adds gasoline, which continues to rise in price, to housing and communal services tariffs. Over the year, prices for it have increased by 10.5%, more than the official inflation figures."

https://www.tbank.ru/invest/social/profile/Ksenia_Investorka/b28461cf-0f0a-4812-9b39-fdf28361a38d/?author=profile

"Average train ticket prices have risen by 20% in a year"
https://iz.ru/1940334/2025-08-21/srednie-tceny-na-bilety-na-poezda-vyrosli-na-20-za-god
Anonymous (ID: Jp8EnFOj) United States No.513820429 >>513821875
>>513817196
>no economic collapse in russia
"In early August, wholesale gasoline prices, which had been steadily growing since the end of winter, reached their peak. In the first week of the month alone, the price of AI-95 gasoline broke its historical record several times.

The main reason for the current dynamics is the shortage of gasoline on the market. Despite the fact that Russia produces fuel in large volumes, its delivery to remote regions, especially to the south, Siberia, and the Far East, remains difficult due to a shortage of specialized rolling stock. Also, the reduction in supply on the domestic market is due to repairs at several large Russian oil refineries at once.

Today, "unscheduled shutdowns" of refineries have the greatest impact on pricing."

https://www.kommersant.ru/doc/7971552
Anonymous (ID: +JduH7QC) Russian Federation No.513821875
>>513820429
>pasta dumping
We'll just have to wait and see at the end of another two weeks, botbro.
Anonymous (ID: 4IAghefu) United States No.513822272
*laughs in melting northern trade routes*
Anonymous (ID: oPQ5+msJ) Canada No.513822410
>>513815120 (OP)
>How long can Canada realistically keep it going with their economy continously going down?
>continously - ELS poojeet detected
Now lets compare Debt per Capita of GDP & Total Gold Holdings
Anonymous (ID: UobOerKA) United States No.513822516
>>513815120 (OP)
Their economy doesn't matter. Russians are accustom to living in a shithole and occasionally wandering off to die in a foreign war.
Anonymous (ID: e6hS8AVv) Germany No.513822765
>>513817046
care abotu your own shithole, snownigger
Anonymous (ID: x+/cgCfy) No.513823025
>>513816277
So? Look up what happened to for example Australia's economy in the 1970s and 80s. Australia is a country quite similar to Russia in that it exports a lot of natural resources.

https://fred.stlouisfed.org/graph/?g=lPha
https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/FPCPITOTLZGAUS
https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/NGDPRSAXDCAUQ

High inflation helps the Russian government fund the war while avoiding massive deficit spending, because inflation decreases social spending in real terms in a way that is politically palatable.

21% interest rate is high, but when you consider that prewar interest rates where 8.5% and the lowest rate in recent history is 4.25% (during covid), interest payments on loans are not actually that many times higher. Furthermore, there have been various targeted subsidies that have meant that many people have not paid the full interest rate.

https://tradingeconomics.com/russia/interest-rate
Anonymous (ID: oPQ5+msJ) Canada No.513823847
>>513817046
>elected retards for decades
>tf, tp
talk about a case of a pot calling the kettle black eh
Anonymous (ID: c9vbaZVp) United States No.513824256
Russia is winning.