The Borneo Post

Russia after crash discovers consumer puzzle won’t fit again

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RUSSIAN consumer demand, which came undone quickly during a recession, will take time to put together again.

The pieces don’t fit because because households continue to embrace thrift even as the rouble tests new highs and inflation at the slowest in history boosts purchasing power.

While unemployme­nt unexpected­ly declined in December and real wages surged more than estimated for their fifth monthly gain, retail sales plunged 5.9 per cent from a year earlier, the Federal Statistics Service said last Wednesday. Their decline for a record 24th month was worse than all but one forecast in a Bloomberg survey of 13 economists, whose median was for a drop of 3.7 per cent.

With the economy on the cusp of recovery after its longest contractio­n in two decades, consumers are reluctant to spend after a currency crisis and a spike in inflation tore through household finances.

That will calm nerves at the central bank by helping disinflati­on and keeping demand pressures weak, according to Bank of America Corp.

“People are still in crisis deleveragi­ng mode and are acting thrifty, so any additional income isn’t spent,” said Vladimir Osakovskiy, chief economist for Russia at BofA in Moscow.

“This supports deposit generation, but at the same time constrains spending.”

Consumptio­n, the main driver of Russia’s expansion in the past decade, is still so brittle because broader economic gains aren’t translatin­g into improvemen­ts for the millions of people who bore the brunt of the recession.

“An increase in poverty is causing a divergence between relatively positive income and unemployme­nt figures and consumptio­n patterns,” said Natalia Orlova, chief economist at Alfa Bank in Moscow.

Real disposable incomes fell the most in four months, shrinking 6.1 per cent in December from a year earlier, according to the statistics service.

The median estimate in a Bloomberg poll of nine economists was for a drop of 5.1 per cent.

A poll published on Monday by the Higher School of Economics showed the financial situation worsened for 39 per cent of respondent­s in the past 12 months and improved for only nine per cent. When asked about the future, 23 per cent believe

People are still in crisis deleveragi­ng mode and are acting thrifty, so any additional income isn’t spent...This supports deposit generation, but at the same time constrains spending.

their personal welfare will deteriorat­e in the coming year, with 11 per cent expecting it to get better.

“The population has already adapted to the new reality: in other words, tightened the belt by cutting spending as much possible and optimising its consumer basket to a lower level of incomes,” Georgy Ostapkovic­h, head of the Institute for Statistica­l Studies and Economics of Knowledge that conducted the study, said in an emailed research note.

The savings rate, at 10 per cent of disposable incomes in January to November, remains at almost double the ratio in 2008.

Still, it’s fallen from 14.3 per cent in 2015, with the central bank mentioning a decrease in the propensity to save as a threat for its four per cent inflation target this year.

The average maximum deposit rate offered by the country’s 10 biggest holders of savings fell to 8.29 per cent as of Jan. 20, the lowest level since February 2014, according to the central bank.

To encourage savers, the central bank plans to hold interest rates above inflation. Besides keeping down price pressures, the Bank of Russia is counting on the policy to help transform deposits into investment and ensure healthy growth for the economy.

It left the benchmark rate at 10 per cent in December, while price growth slowed to 5.4 per cent from a year earlier.

“Consumers became much more cautious and rational,” said Vladimir Miklashevs­ky, senior strategist at Danske Bank in Helsinki.

“We don’t expect a quick recovery in retail sales as cautiousne­ss will remain, along with a high sensitivit­y of consumers to prices.” — WPBloomber­g

Vladimir Osakovskiy, chief economist for Russia at BofA in Moscow

 ??  ?? A customer browses fruit and vegetable products inside a Victoria supermarke­t in Moscow on Oct 21, 2016. — WP-Bloomberg photo
A customer browses fruit and vegetable products inside a Victoria supermarke­t in Moscow on Oct 21, 2016. — WP-Bloomberg photo

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