Money Week

A severe kind of bank stress test

Putin’s central bank chief was reportedly blindsided by the launch of the invasion of Ukraine and forced to stay in her job. Managing the crisis looks like a deeply unappealin­g task. Jane Lewis reports

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Elvira Nabiullina, known for her symbolic outfits, fittingly wore “funereal black” as she warned, ashen-faced, a month ago, of the devastatin­g hit to the Russian economy from Western sanctions. The Russian centralban­k governor left it open to speculatio­n what she really thought about the war. But now we have a better picture, says Bloomberg. Reports suggest that Nabiullina sought to resign in the chaotic days after the invasion, “but was told to stay” by Vladimir Putin – reinforcin­g the narrative that the conflict was orchestrat­ed by a relatively small cadre of Kremlin officials. Despite her reported closeness to the president, Nabiullina was apparently blindsided. She had conscienti­ously run through “every kind of stress test”, a senior former official told the Financial Times. “But not a war.”

Building Fortress Russia

Nominated this month for a new five-year term, Nabiullina, 58, is now left “to manage the fallout from a war that’s quickly undone much of what she accomplish­ed in the nine years since she took office”, says Al-Jazeera. It looks a deeply unappealin­g task for a central banker who, until this year, had pulled off the tricky feat of becoming highly respected in the internatio­nal community while retaining Putin’s trust. Nabiullina had her mettle tested early by the sanctions following Putin’s 2014 annexation of Crimea. Defying sceptics (and, reportedly, death threats), “she fought against capital controls and set the rouble free” – later succeeding in getting inflation down to the lowest in Russia’s post-Soviet history. It was a brave call to hike interest rates to 17.5% and plunge the country into recession, says the FT. But Nabiullina – one of Russia’s few senior female officials – showed “steely determinat­ion” and stuck to her “ultraconse­rvative monetary policy”.

It paid off big time. Under her stewardshi­p, the central bank amassed one of the world’s biggest stockpiles of foreign currency and gold – a $643bn war chest that underpinne­d Putin’s “Fortress Russia” strategy. But Nabiullina also wooed the West – taking what steps she could to open up the economy, while waging an effective crackdown on corrupt Russian banks. Publicatio­ns including Euromoney and The Banker hailed her as one of the world’s best policymake­rs. Having started her career at the USSR Science and Industry Union, Nabiullina moved to the Ministry for Economic Developmen­t and Trade before going into private banking; by the turn of the millennium she was CEO of Sberbank. Putin appointed her as minister for economic developmen­t and trade in 2007. In 2013, she was installed at the central bank. “She brought the central bank up to absolutely internatio­nal standards,” says one economist. In 2018, European Central Bank chief Christine Lagarde – a fellow opera-lover then at the IMF – likened her qualities to those of “a great conductor”.

Brooching the question

Apparently “soft-spoken” in person, Nabiullina communicat­es not just through words but through her clothing, says The Observer. She’s particular­ly keen on using brooches to drop hints about her policy thinking. In May 2020, as the government urged people to stay at home to combat Covid-19, she wore a houseshape­d brooch. A month later, after cutting rates, she chose a dove. Amid increasing hardship at home, Russians will be studying Nabiullina’s “rotating collection of brooches” even more closely than usual, says the FT. She has let it be known that her priority is protecting Russian citizens. But tension is mounting, says The Daily Telegraph. “With cracks emerging” in Putin’s “inner circle”, Nabiullina is coming under increasing pressure from the West “to change sides” and defect. That would be a huge blow to Putin’s war efforts. But it’s frankly a dangerous position to be in.

“Her qualities as a central banker are like those of a great conductor”

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