Despite this deceleration, inflation remains a challenge. As a result, the Russian Central Bank recently lowered its policy rate by 100 basis points — a smaller-than-expected cut — to 17%. Russian consumers are already feeling the pinch. Car sales, for example, are forecast to fall by 24% this year.
Putin is also facing a fiscal challenge. Russia’s budget deficit in the first eight months of 2025 hit 1.9% of annual GDP and is projected to grow to 2.6% of GDP by the end of the year — low by American or European standards, but problematic for a country that has been cut off from international borrowing as a punishment for invading Ukraine.