Times-Call (Longmont)

Bloomberg Opinion on how we shouldn’t buy Putin’s bluff; the West can outspend him:

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Vladimir Putin wants the world to believe that Russia’s economy is doing fine, and that he has the wherewitha­l to prosecute the war in Ukraine indefinite­ly.

He’s bluffing. His aggression is costing him dearly, and the West should exploit this vulnerabil­ity to the fullest.

Before invading Ukraine — two years ago, on Feb. 24 — Putin had painstakin­gly built Russia’s fiscal and financial defenses, a crucial element of his own grasp on power.

At just 16% of gross domestic product, sovereign debt was among the smallest of any nation. In the second year of the pandemic, the government was already running a budget surplus (in contrast to large and persistent deficits in the U.S. and Europe).

It had accumulate­d a $175 billion “national wellbeing” fund and more than $500 billion in internatio­nal reserves at its central bank. The largest banks were well capitalize­d compared with their global peers.

Now, Putin has radically changed course, both to fund the war and to prop up the economy amid Western sanctions. Military spending has gone from 3.6% of GDP in 2021 to an estimated 7.1%, boosting production of everything from artillery shells to computers. Soldiers’ salaries and death benefits have lifted the fortunes of the poorest families. More than $130 billion in subsidized loans have enabled Russians to splurge on new apartments, contributi­ng to a boom in constructi­on. As a result, real GDP growth rebounded to 3.6% last year, defying prediction­s of a protracted recession.

Yet the limits to such “military Keynesiani­sm” are already evident. The war’s consumptio­n of able-bodied workers has driven the unemployme­nt rate to an extreme low of 2.9%, forcing civilian industries to pay more for scarce labor.

To keep inflation in check, the central bank has had to hike its benchmark interest rate to 16%, further squeezing the private sector. Military spending won’t keep adding to GDP growth: Just maintainin­g it at the current level would require big sacrifices in other important areas, such as social spending and much-needed infrastruc­ture maintenanc­e. Without the war-related stimulus, Russia’s economic performanc­e would look much less impressive.

Worse for Putin, he’s rapidly eroding the defenses he constructe­d to protect the economy and himself from unexpected shocks. Much of the central bank’s reserves are frozen in the West.

The National Wellbeing Fund’s liquid assets have declined by nearly half since the beginning of the war, to about $55 billion. The government is running an annual budget deficit of about $17 billion, and its borrowing capacity is of limited use if domestic banks are the only available lenders. Those same banks are increasing­ly exposed to losses as skyhigh interest rates weigh on corporate borrowers ....

NATO members’ fiscal resources are more than 20 times greater than Russia’s . ...

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