×

Economic pessimism among Russians at highest in at least 20 years, Gallup poll shows

By Thomson Reuters Jun 30, 2026 | 8:18 AM

June 30 (Reuters) – Russians are more pessimistic about the state of their economy than at any time in the past 20 years, and a majority say living standards are worsening, polling organisation Gallup ​said in a survey published on Tuesday.

Gallup said 60% of ‌respondents in Russia said economic conditions in the city or area where they lived were getting worse, while only 27% thought they were improving and 9% believed they were remaining the same.

When asked about living standards, 56% said they were worsening, 29% said they ‌were ​getting better and 14% saw no change.

The phone ⁠survey of 1,000 Russians, conducted ⁠between March 14 and May 6, reflects gloomy sentiment even before this month’s sharp worsening of the fuel supply situation. At a time of high seasonal demand, shortages of gasoline have broken out in many ​parts of the country after Ukraine intensified strikes on oil refineries.

Confidence in the Russian military was down to 66%, Gallup found, from 80% in ⁠2022, the year of Russia’s full-scale invasion ⁠of Ukraine, and confidence in the government fell to 53% ​from 66% in the same period.

Gallup also published the results of a survey ​conducted in Ukraine, which showed that approval of “the job performance ‌of the leadership of the United States” had sunk to 7%, with 79% disapproving.

In the past two decades of Gallup polling across more than 140 countries, no other country has seen a larger drop in U.S. approval over ⁠any five-year period, the organisation said.

U.S. President Donald Trump, while sometimes criticising Russia’s Vladimir Putin, has also leaned on Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy to accept a peace ⁠deal on terms that ‌Kyiv considers unacceptable, telling him at the White House ⁠last year: “You don’t have the cards.”

Gallup said 24% of ​respondents ‌said Ukraine should keep fighting until victory, while 66% ​said it should ⁠seek to negotiate an end to the war as soon as possible – little changed since a year ago, when the figures were 24% and 69%, respectively.

The survey of 1,000 Ukrainians, conducted in April, did not ask people what kind of negotiated settlement they would be prepared to accept.

(Reporting by Mark Trevelyan; Editing ​by Susan Fenton)