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IMF cuts Russia’s 2026 growth forecast by 0.2 percentage points to 0.8%

By Thomson Reuters Jan 19, 2026 | 9:39 AM

MOSCOW, Jan 19 (Reuters) – The International Monetary Fund cut its forecast for Russia’s economic growth in 2026 ‍by 0.2 percentage points to 0.8% on Monday.

The fund, which has not sent monitoring missions to assess the state of the country’s economy since November 2019, before ‌the start of the COVID ‌pandemic, did not provide a reason for the downgrade.

Russia’s President Vladimir Putin has asked the government and the central bank to bring ​the economy back on the path of “balanced growth” in 2026, which ‍would be the fifth ​year of the war in ​Ukraine.

After showing resilience to Western sanctions during ‍the first three years of the war in Ukraine, the Russian economy slowed to about 1% growth in 2025 from 4.3% in 2024 as ‍a result of the central bank keeping the key interest rate high to fight inflation.

High ‍costs of ‍credit, an excessively strong ​rouble, labour shortages, tax hikes ​and ⁠falling state revenues from oil ‌and gas are weighing down on the economy, making an economic rebound in 2026 unlikely.

The central bank forecasts economic growth of between 0.5% and 1.5% in 2026.

(Reporting by ⁠Gleb Bryanski)