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Russia’s 2026 budget deficit may exceed plans by $12.85 billion due to higher spending

By Thomson Reuters Jul 16, 2026 | 2:10 AM

MOSCOW, July 16 (Reuters) – Russia’s federal budget spending and deficit could exceed official plans by more than 1 trillion roubles ($12.85 billion) in 2026, according to the ​data from the government’s budget portal.

The outlet, which ‌aggregates information from the finance ministry and federal treasury, did not give a reason for the increase, although Russia’s military spending is on the rise due to the war with Ukraine.

The projection comes as the ‌central ​bank considers whether to continue cutting ⁠its key interest rate ⁠or keep it unchanged at next week’s policy meeting. The Bank of Russia has repeatedly identified a wider budget deficit as a major inflationary risk.

According to the data, ​federal spending is projected to reach 45.11 trillion roubles in 2026, compared with 44.07 trillion roubles in the budget ⁠law.

Projected revenue remains unchanged, at ⁠40.28 trillion roubles, implying a budget deficit of ​4.83 trillion roubles, versus 3.79 trillion roubles, or 1.6% of ​the gross domestic product, currently assumed by the budget.

Russia’s ‌budget deficit was 5.73 trillion roubles, or 2.5% of GDP, in the first half of the year, finance ministry data showed, 1.7 times higher than in the same period a ⁠year earlier.

Finance Minister Anton Siluanov has said the deficit would increase “somewhat” compared with the official target, while pledging this would not ⁠significantly increase domestic ‌borrowing.

The budget gap also remains higher than ⁠previously planned over the following two years. The ​finance ‌ministry has postponed achieving a zero primary ​budget deficit, ⁠as required under Russia’s fiscal rule, until 2029.

In 2025, Russia’s budget deficit exceeded the official target almost fivefold, reaching 5.7 trillion roubles, or 2.6% of GDP, the highest level since the pandemic year of 2020.

($1 = 77.8000 roubles)

(Reporting by Darya Korsunskaya. Editing ​by Mark Potter)