Updated
Updated · bbc.co.uk · Jul 18
Russia Adds 1.56 Trillion Roubles in Cash as Internet Shutdowns Disrupt Card Payments
Updated
Updated · bbc.co.uk · Jul 18

Russia Adds 1.56 Trillion Roubles in Cash as Internet Shutdowns Disrupt Card Payments

2 articles · Updated · bbc.co.uk · Jul 18

Summary

  • 1.56 trillion roubles has entered circulation in Russia since January—the biggest rise for this period outside the pandemic—as households and firms shift back to cash.
  • Mobile internet shutdowns imposed during Ukrainian drone attacks have repeatedly knocked out card payments, while businesses under tax pressure are steering customers and wages off the books.
  • 550 billion roubles was withdrawn from bank accounts in May alone, including 200 billion from fixed-term deposits, even though Sberbank still offers about 10% on one-year deposits.
  • The cash shift is colliding with the Kremlin’s revenue drive after January’s VAT increase to 22%, with a May SME survey showing 6% of entrepreneurs had turned to grey schemes.
  • Russia’s economy ministry cut its 2026 growth forecast to 0.4% in May, underscoring how war strain, slower growth and security measures are now undermining tax collection.

Insights

Is Russia’s war economy creating a cash crisis that threatens to defund the war itself?
Amid internet shutdowns and a cash surge, are Russians being forced back into a pre-digital era?
Will Russia’s economic crisis and rising discontent prove a greater threat to Putin than the battlefield?