The Demolition of Russia's Economy

How are things going over in Russia? "Everything has collapsed". Hmm, maybe you're throwing the wrong people out of windows?

'Everything Has Collapsed': Mobilization Tanks Small Businesses

https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2022...ed-mobilization-tanks-small-businesses-a79075

In his brand new co-working space in Chelyabinsk, a city in central Russia, entrepreneur Maxim Novikov is counting the empty seats.

The space is usually overflowing with designers, programmers and young Russians working on their start-ups.

But since President Vladimir Putin announced a mobilization of hundreds of thousands of young Russian men last month, the 33-year-old has lost much of his clientele.

"Many have stopped coming," he told AFP by phone.

Instead, they are filling the depleted ranks of Russia's army or they are among the tens of thousands of others who have fled south for neighboring Kazakhstan.

The Kremlin's mobilization has brought uncertainty and chaos to businesses already hard-hit by sanctions and still recovering from the fallout of the pandemic. In the last three weeks, a little more than half of the 77 spots in Novikov's co-working place were occupied.

He has "no idea" if the people who fled or were drafted will keep paying subscription fees, which cost between $70 and $130.

And now Novikov is worried about his loans.

"Turnover has already dropped by more than 40% this year," Novikov, an architecture graduate, said. "I wanted to buy a third space but for the moment it is not possible to take the risk."

But he is far from the only business owner in Russia who is growing more nervous over the workforce vacuum.

"It means projects are being put on hold and private companies will be afraid to invest," said Natalia Zubarevich, an economist at Moscow State University.

Russia's economy has already been battered this year by unprecedented Western sanctions in response to Putin's decision to send troops to Ukraine on Feb. 24.

But Zubarevich said mobilization was an "additional aggravating factor."

She added she was not surprised young men from the provinces were joining the army, attracted by monthly payouts that are sometimes almost as much as their annual salaries.

Meanwhile, in glitzy central Moscow, 45-year-old Yelena Irisova is distraught at seeing her company, which produces luxury leather bags, stop production.

She employs around 10 people in the small business, but two of her craftsmen left the company in recent weeks – one fearing mobilization, another to help her daughter whose husband had been sent to the front.

"After Sept. 21, everything collapsed," Irisova said. "Our sales fell threefold – from 10 to three orders a day."

She says her savings will keep her going "a month or two, but not more."

No Russian business seems unscathed. Katerina Iberika, 39, who owns a pastry shop specializing in birthday cakes in Moscow, is also facing ruin.

Her five employees are women with exemptions from mobilization. But it's the low morale among the public that's endangering her business.

"Cancellations of orders for big events started two days before mobilization," Iberika told AFP.

Now she gets nearly no orders at all, except for "very small" ones, and is considering leaving Russia.

In increased isolation – and hit by sanctions and mobilization – an anxious Russian society is watching its spending closely.

"People are looking to put their money aside," Sofya Donets, chief economist for Russia at Renaissance Capital, said. "They're not going to overspend."

Some industries have been harder hit than others by a sudden lack of men.

Employers have sounded the alarm in recent days, asking the government for exemptions from mobilization, in particular for small and medium-sized companies.

Russia's economic development ministry told AFP that it had drawn up a list of measures for these "problematic issues" and had facilitated grants and microcredits.

"A mobilized entrepreneur will be able to suspend the fulfillment of obligations" to pay the loans back, the ministry said.

Donets expects "more intervention and state aid" to calm the effects of mobilization, however, especially since Russian coffers continue to fill up thanks to its energy exports.

Tough shit. Cry me a river asswipes with your fucking yuppie businesses. This is what it looks like when Moscow and St.Petersburg are impacted and not just the kids from Siberia and Tartars from Crimea.

One of the things that is disgusting is all these types suddenly crowing about "being against the war." That's complete bullshit. What they are against is mobilization. Otherwise they were content to watch it on Russian TV or youtube as long as the peasants were fighting the war. Instead they are running off and polluting places like Georgia- countries that have been trying very hard for years to develop non-Russian identities. Now they are wall-to-wall with Russian speakers who are rapidly russifying their countries, again.

set flame/off.
 
Russia's Economy Ravaged by War as Budget Surplus Completely Wiped Out

Russia's budget surplus more than halved last month in a sign of the impact Vladimir Putin's invasion of Ukraine is having on his country's public finances.

Preliminary data from Russia's Finance Ministry showed that the country's fiscal surplus shrank to 55 billion rubles ($860 million) in the first nine months of the year, down from 137 billion roubles ($2.15 billion), Bloomberg reported.

https://www.newsweek.com/russia-war-budget-deficit-ruble-economy-1751552
 
link below.

Just one of many reasons why K-stan distances itself from Russia these days.

They have some economic strengths and aspirations that would go down the tube immediately if they had done something stupid like send troops to Ukraine as Putin keeps leaning on them to do.

Nope. And they will be shipping increasing amounts of oil to countries that - shall we say- are no longer big customers for Russia.

Stay far, far, away from Russian geopolitical games and your future will be much brighter.

Huge Kazakh Oilfield Set To Resume Production By End-October

https://oilprice.com/Energy/Crude-O...-Set-To-Resume-Production-By-End-October.html
 
All those chips that failed QA and were on the discharge pile out back. Guess where they landed up. What a shame.

China dumps dud chips on Russia, Moscow media moans
What? Sanctions-busting sellers aren't interested in your complaints? That's a shame
https://www.theregister.com/2022/10/18/russia_china_semiconductro_failure_rates/

The failure rate of semiconductors shipped from China to Russia has increased by 1,900 percent in recent months, according to Russian national business daily Коммерсантъ (Kommersant).

Quoting an anonymous source, Kommersant states that before Russia's illegal invasion of Ukraine the defect rate in imported silicon was two percent. Since that war commenced, Russian manufacturers have apparently faced 40 percent failure rates.

Even a two percent defect rate is sub-optimal, because products made of many components can therefore experience considerable quality problems. Forty percent failure rates mean supplies are perilously close to being unfit for purpose.

According to Kommersant, Russian electronics manufacturers are not enjoying life at all because, on top of high failure rates, gray market gear doesn't flow with the same speed as legit kit and supply chains are currently very kinked indeed inside Russia.

The newspaper lays the blame on economic sanctions that have seen many major businesses quit Russia. Gray market distributors and other opportunistic operators have been left as the only entities willing to deal with Russian businesses.

Gray market folks are not renowned for their sterling customer service nor their commitment to quality. They get away with it because buyers of products with – ahem – unconventional origins self-incriminate if they complain to authorities.

Perhaps they're even dumping dud product on Russian buyers, knowing that they can't easily access alternatives.

If 40 percent of silicon sourced from China is indeed kaput, it's an interesting expression of the "friendship without limits" that Moscow and Beijing declared in February 2022. It's also an oddity, given China's oft-stated ambition to crush corruption, modernize its economy, and focus only on quality development of world-leading products.

China has used diplomatic language that makes it plain it does not entirely approve of Russia's illegal invasion of Ukraine – but the Middle Kingdom also doesn't entirely mind Russia's international isolation. It means Chinese companies' export prospects improve at a time when most of the world's liberal democracies have shut the door on Huawei, ZTE, and other high-tech Chinese companies.

Moscow, meanwhile, needs to pump out more kit to sustain its illegal invasion. Semiconductors are a critical element of that effort, so if failure rates are high whoever is sending dodgy products to Russia is hampering the not-a-war effort.
 
All those chips that failed QA and were on the discharge pile out back. Guess where they landed up. What a shame.

China dumps dud chips on Russia, Moscow media moans
What? Sanctions-busting sellers aren't interested in your complaints? That's a shame
https://www.theregister.com/2022/10/18/russia_china_semiconductro_failure_rates/

The failure rate of semiconductors shipped from China to Russia has increased by 1,900 percent in recent months, according to Russian national business daily Коммерсантъ (Kommersant).

Quoting an anonymous source, Kommersant states that before Russia's illegal invasion of Ukraine the defect rate in imported silicon was two percent. Since that war commenced, Russian manufacturers have apparently faced 40 percent failure rates.

Even a two percent defect rate is sub-optimal, because products made of many components can therefore experience considerable quality problems. Forty percent failure rates mean supplies are perilously close to being unfit for purpose.

According to Kommersant, Russian electronics manufacturers are not enjoying life at all because, on top of high failure rates, gray market gear doesn't flow with the same speed as legit kit and supply chains are currently very kinked indeed inside Russia.

The newspaper lays the blame on economic sanctions that have seen many major businesses quit Russia. Gray market distributors and other opportunistic operators have been left as the only entities willing to deal with Russian businesses.

Gray market folks are not renowned for their sterling customer service nor their commitment to quality. They get away with it because buyers of products with – ahem – unconventional origins self-incriminate if they complain to authorities.

Perhaps they're even dumping dud product on Russian buyers, knowing that they can't easily access alternatives.

If 40 percent of silicon sourced from China is indeed kaput, it's an interesting expression of the "friendship without limits" that Moscow and Beijing declared in February 2022. It's also an oddity, given China's oft-stated ambition to crush corruption, modernize its economy, and focus only on quality development of world-leading products.

China has used diplomatic language that makes it plain it does not entirely approve of Russia's illegal invasion of Ukraine – but the Middle Kingdom also doesn't entirely mind Russia's international isolation. It means Chinese companies' export prospects improve at a time when most of the world's liberal democracies have shut the door on Huawei, ZTE, and other high-tech Chinese companies.

Moscow, meanwhile, needs to pump out more kit to sustain its illegal invasion. Semiconductors are a critical element of that effort, so if failure rates are high whoever is sending dodgy products to Russia is hampering the not-a-war effort.

Cut rate tech - check
Wormy meat up next.
 
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