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在线翻译:
szdaily -> World Economy
Russia forecasts economic slump
     2014-December-29  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

    SLUMPING oil prices have put Russia’s economy on course for a sharp recession and double-digit inflation next year, government ministers said Friday, as authorities scaled up a bailout for the first bank to succumb to this month’s ruble crisis.

    The economy is slowing sharply as Western sanctions over the Ukraine crisis deter foreign investment and spur capital flight, and as a slump in oil prices severely reduces Russia’s export revenues and pummels the ruble.

    The government has taken steps to support key banks and address the deepening currency crisis in the past week, including a sharp and unexpected interest rate hike, but analysts are pessimistic on the outlook for both the economy and the ruble.

    Finance Minister Anton Siluanov told journalists Friday the economy could shrink by 4 percent in 2015, its first contraction since 2009, if oil prices averaged their current level of US$60 a barrel.

    Siluanov also said the country would run a budget deficit of more than 3 percent next year if the oil price did not rise.

    “Next year we will, without doubt, have to bring the Reserve Fund into play,” he said, referring to one of Russia’s two rainy-day funds intended to support the economy at times of crisis.

    Crude prices have almost halved from their June peak amid a global glut and a decision by producer group OPEC not to cut output. Saudi Arabia said Friday it was prepared to withstand a prolonged period of low prices.

    “We need to have our budget break even at US$70 per barrel by 2017,” said Siluanov.

    Russia’s government imposed informal capital controls last week, including orders to large state-controlled oil and gas exporters Gazprom and Rosneft to sell some of their dollar revenues to shore up the ruble.

    Russians have kept a wary eye on the exchange rate since the collapse of the Soviet Union. Hyper-inflation wiped out their savings over several years in the early 1990s and the ruble collapsed again in 1998.

    The ruble’s latest fall will inevitably lead to higher inflation next year, which after years of stability threatens President Vladimir Putin’s reputation for ensuring Russia’s prosperity.

    “The inflation forecast is tough, high. We forecast the level of 10 percent at the end of the year (2015),” Russian Economy Minister Alexei Ulyukayev said Friday.

    Inflation would remain in double digits throughout 2015, peaking at the end of the first quarter or in the second quarter, he added.

    The Russian currency slipped Friday after hitting its strongest levels in more than three weeks earlier in the day.

    (SD-Agencies)

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