Russia: Record Current Account Surplus Disguises Longer-term Impact of Economic Sanctions

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Russia’s current account surplus – a broad measure of the country’s trade, investment earnings and transfer payments with the rest of the world – widened to USD 58.2bn in Q1 2022 (Figure 1), equivalent to nearly 10% of the Central Bank of Russia (CBR)’s USD 609bn of international reserves as of 8 April (including sanctioned and frozen reserves), which are down from a record high of USD 643bn on 18 February, before the full-scale invasion.

The wider surplus reflects soaring revenue from Russia’s oil and gas exports – largely spared from international sanctions for the present.

Figure 1. Russia recorded its highest ever current account surplus since at least 1994

Source: Bank of Russia, Ministry of Finance of the Russian Federation, OPEC, Scope Ratings
Source: Bank of Russia, Ministry of Finance of the Russian Federation, OPEC, Scope Ratings

Absent broader EU sanctions, Russia’s current account surplus could end the year above USD 200bn

Without broader EU sanctions of Russian oil and gas, Russia’s current account surplus could end the year well above USD 200bn, up from about USD 120bn in 2021, due to collapse of imports and the surging value of its commodity exports. This would essentially enable the CBR to rebuild a large segment of international reserves that sanctions have frozen.

Russia will speed up “de-dollarisation” of its reserves and foreign trade, including via increasing its exposure to Chinese renminbi, while maintaining exposure to euro. Russia currently conducts trade with China more in euro than in dollar, with EUR being the settlement currency with respect to half of Russian exports to China, compared with around one-third for USD.

We are yet to see the full impact of sanctions on the Russian economy

However, we are yet to see the full impact of sanctions and resulting consequences of the war on Russian foreign trade and the domestic economy, even if there is no near-term oil or gas embargo. First, sanctions are leading to a painful adjustment of imports for the Russian private sector, disrupting more than half of imported high-tech goods as well as a significant segment of imported machinery and equipment key for industrial production.

A loss of access to foreign technology weakens Russia’s already moderate medium-run growth potential, which we had estimated of around 1.5%-2% annually before the war’s escalation, while we expect Russian GDP to contract by at least 10% this year.

Secondly, an acceleration of European efforts to diversify energy imports away from Russia exacerbate medium-run economic challenges given lack of an ambitious government policy addressing the economy’s reliance on its energy export sector. The EU, which is, overall, Russia’s largest trading partner, recorded imports of Russian petroleum, natural gas and other related products of EUR 100bn last year. The EU’s plan to shed its dependence on Russian gas by 2030 could be brought forward – driven by German ambition to substantially cut dependence by 2024 – via diversification of gas supplies through increased liquefied natural gas and pipeline imports from non-Russian sources.