Russia’s fiscal deficit widened in 2023, mainly due to rising defense spending and social expenditures as well as declining energy export revenues. Looking ahead, military spending is expected to surge to around 6% of GDP in 2024, making up about one third of the total budget. However, revenues are also expected to rise, in part thanks to special taxes on energy companies. Overall, we forecast an annual fiscal deficit of around -2% of GDP in 2024. Russia will finance the shortfall through domestic bond (OFZ) issuance and withdrawals from the National Wealth Fund (NWF, a sovereign wealth fund). That said, it should be noted that a substantial drawdown of the NWF, as well as potential expenditure cuts in the next years, would have crucial medium- and long-term effects for the economy and the welfare of the Russian people.
Russia’s foreign exchange (FX) reserves have recovered since September 2022 and we expect the Russian economy from this perspective to be able to cope with Western sanctions in 2024. FX reserves (excluding gold) fell from USD498bn in January 2022 to a temporary low of USD417bn (including frozen FX reserves) in September 2022, about half of which was due to the USD’s strength weighing on the valuation of assets in other currencies. Since then, they have recovered somewhat and stood at to USD443bn at end-2023. A reversal of the valuation effect played a role in the recovery, but the record-high current account surplus of USD238bn (+10.5% of GDP) in 2022 and the de-dollarization of external trade have likely been more important. The Chinese renminbi is gaining increasing popularity in Russia’s external trade so that forthcoming export earnings cannot be frozen by Western sanctions anymore. Under the assumption that frozen FX reserves have remained roughly stable at USD238bn (half of total FX reserves in February 2022) since the war began, available FX reserves are currently estimated at just over USD200bn. This level is sufficient to cover a healthy six months of imports. Meanwhile, the current account surplus shrank markedly to USD53bn in 2023 (around +2.7% of GDP), mainly due to lower energy export revenues, and we forecast it to remain close to that level in 2024. Yet such a surplus should help to escape a sharp decline in available FX reserves over the next year. In a more conservative but less likely scenario where available FX reserves fall to USD160bn at some point in 2024, import cover would still be five months. And in a worse scenario, Russia would still have the possibility to monetize part of its gold reserves, which stood at around USD156bn at end-2023.