Russian Economic Report, April 2015 : The Dawn of a New Economic Era?

Autor: World Bank Group
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2015
Předmět:
OIL-EXPORTING COUNTRIES
TOTAL DEBT
IMPORT DEMAND
UNCERTAINTY
PRIVATE INVESTMENT
WORLD TRADE
CURRENCY CRISIS
DEPOSIT
INFLATION
EXTERNAL FINANCES
EMERGING MARKET
FISCAL DEFICIT
OIL SUPPLY
EXCHANGE RATE DYNAMICS
DEPOSIT INSURANCE
RECESSION
IMPORT
GOVERNMENT POLICY
DISPOSABLE INCOME
CONSUMER PRICE INDEX
PENSION
BONDS
SOVEREIGN RATING
STRUCTURAL RIGIDITIES
FOREIGN CURRENCY LOANS
GEOPOLITICAL TENSIONS
GOVERNMENT BUDGET
HIGH INFLATION
OIL DEMAND
EMERGING MARKETS
MORTGAGE
REPO
NPL
PENSIONS
EMERGING ECONOMIES
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
CREDIT DEFAULT SWAP
HOLDING
SOVEREIGN DEBT
DEPOSITS
REMITTANCE
BORROWING COSTS
CREDITORS
LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES
INTERNATIONAL FINANCE
BANK DEPOSITS
GLOBAL ECONOMY
PURCHASING POWER
CAPITAL OUTFLOW
DEVALUATION
CURRENCY DEPRECIATION
INDEBTEDNESS
BASIS POINTS
MONETARY POLICY
SLOWDOWN
LIQUIDITY
INTEREST RATES
EXTERNAL SHOCK
GROSS CAPITAL FORMATION
BUDGET DEFICIT
FIXED CAPITAL
EXTERNAL SHOCKS
INVESTMENT PROJECTS
DEBT SERVICING COSTS
INFLATIONARY PRESSURE
TRADE BALANCE
INVESTMENT ACTIVITIES
CONSOLIDATION
RETURN ON ASSETS
CAPITAL MARKETS
CURRENT ACCOUNT BALANCE
UNEMPLOYMENT RATE
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
INTERNATIONAL RESERVES
FINANCIAL SYSTEM
FISCAL POLICY
SPARE CAPACITY
EXCHANGE RATE
CURRENCY
BOND
INFLATION TARGETING
CAPITAL ACCOUNT
DEBT SECURITIES
DOMESTIC DEMAND
INVESTMENT RATES
EXTERNAL BORROWING
COMMODITY PRICES
BOND ISSUANCE
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
NONPERFORMING LOANS
MARKET SHARE
FLEXIBLE EXCHANGE RATE REGIME
ACCESS TO CAPITAL
CENTRAL BANKS
LABOR MARKETS
DEPRECIATIONS
PROFIT MARGINS
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
HIGH-INCOME COUNTRIES
INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MARKETS
INCOME GROWTH
RESERVE FUND
CAPITAL FORMATION
PUBLIC INVESTMENT
DEBT PAYMENT
DEVALUATIONS
LOCAL CURRENCY
FINANCIAL FLOWS
INTERNATIONAL CAPITAL
FLEXIBLE EXCHANGE RATE
CAPITAL FLOWS
INVESTMENT INCOME
REAL WAGE GROWTH
TAX
BANKING SYSTEM
STOCK MARKET
DEVELOPING COUNTRY
PENSION FUND
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
AGGREGATE CONSUMPTION
CURRENCY ADJUSTMENT
EXTERNAL FINANCING
INTERNATIONAL CAPITAL MARKETS
OIL EXPORTERS
TRADE GROWTH
STOCKS
DEBT REPAYMENT
REGULATORY FORBEARANCE
BANK LENDING
CREDIT DEFAULT SWAPS
CONSUMER DEMAND
BAILOUT
INVESTING
INVESTMENT FUND
FINANCIAL CRISIS
INFLATION RATE
ASSET POSITIONS
BALANCE SHEETS
EMERGING MARKET BOND
RESERVES
CONSUMER CONFIDENCE
STOCK MARKET PRICES
FEDERAL BUDGET
STATE GUARANTEES
TREASURY BONDS
CAPITAL INVESTMENT
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
INVENTORIES
EXPORTERS
REAL EFFECTIVE EXCHANGE RATE
INTERNATIONAL MARKETS
TRADE DEFICIT
EXTERNAL FUNDING
EXTERNAL DEBT
INTERNATIONAL BOND
BUFFERS
SUPPLY DISRUPTIONS
LABOR MARKET
MARKET VALUE
NATURAL RESOURCE
BANKING SECTOR STABILITY
RELATIVE PRICES
BANKING SECTOR
NON-PERFORMING LOAN
CAPITAL ADEQUACY
INTERNATIONAL BOND MARKETS
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
CENTRAL BANK
RETURN
POLICY RESPONSES
CAPITAL OUTFLOWS
CDS
BOND INDEX
MONEY SUPPLY
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
PRIVATE BANKS
EXTERNAL DEMAND
OIL MARKET
PORTFOLIOS
CREDIT DEFAULT
GLOBAL TRADE
STRUCTURAL PROBLEMS
CYCLICAL FACTORS
REMITTANCES
PURCHASING POWER PARITY
INVESTMENT DEMAND
OIL PRICES
RESERVE
FINANCIAL STABILITY
PRIVATE INVESTORS
INSURANCE
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENTS
OIL EXPORTS
MORTGAGE LOANS
CURRENT ACCOUNT
TREASURY
FREE FLOAT
REPO FACILITIES
GOVERNMENT REVENUE
EXPENDITURES
IMPORTS
CURRENT ACCOUNT SURPLUS
CONSUMER CREDIT
DEBT SERVICING
MONETARY FUND
INFLATIONARY EXPECTATIONS
OIL PRICE
WORLD ECONOMY
GEOPOLITICAL TENSION
EXTERNAL FINANCE
INVESTMENT GOODS
TRADE RESTRICTIONS
OVERDUE LOANS
FIXED INVESTMENT
DISPOSABLE INCOMES
CASH FLOWS
TRADE SHOCK
CAPITAL INFLOWS
LIQUID ASSETS
BOND ISSUE
EQUITY ISSUANCE
FOREIGN CURRENCY
INTEREST RATE
LEVEL PLAYING FIELD
Popis: Russia's economy experienced two shocks in 2014. On top of the structural crisis that began in 2012, Russia had to deal with cyclical and idiosyncratic challenges to the economy. One of the new shocks illustrates Russia s integration into the world economy through its natural resource exports, and thus its dependence on the global commodity cycle: oil prices more than halved between July and December 2014, giving Russia a terms-of-trade shock. The ruble lost 46 percent of its value against the US dollar, which worsened already eroded business and consumer confidence. The monetary tightening in response made credit expensive, further dampening domestic demand. The other, more idiosyncratic, shock was related to the geopolitical tensions that began in March 2014 and led to economic sanctions. The tensions not only heightened perceptions that Russian investments had become riskier, they also dramatically increased the costs of external borrowing for Russian banks and firms. Spreads on Russian credit default swaps peaked in December at 578 basis points, compared to 159 a year ago. Together with the financial sanctions imposed on Russia in late July, which have restricted the access of Russia s largest state-connected banks and firms to Western international finance markets, this all but extinguished investment. The current World Bank baseline outlook, however, sees the national poverty rate increasing from 10.8 percent in 2013 to 14.2 percent in 2015 and 2016. Poverty is expected to increase because real disposable income and consumption will decline. This would be the first significant increase in poverty rates since the 1998-1999 crises. Russia weathered the 2008- 2009 crisis well as disposable incomes continued to grow slightly. Given the current limited fiscal space, additional support for the poor and vulnerable is likely to be less generous than it was during the 2008-2009 crisis. Although people at the bottom of the income distribution are the most vulnerable, there will be less opportunity for an increase in shared prosperity in 2015-2016, and there is a worrisome possibility that recent achievements might be reversed.
Databáze: OpenAIRE