Russian President Vladimir Putin is reportedly pressing the nation’s oligarchs to contribute financially to the state budget. This move aims to stabilize state finances, which have been severely strained by the substantial costs of the ongoing conflict in Ukraine. Reports suggest that Putin intends to continue military operations until Russia secures the remaining territories in Ukraine’s eastern Donbas region.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov, however, disputed these claims, stating that during a meeting, one businessman voluntarily offered to donate funds, an initiative which Putin welcomed but did not explicitly request. Peskov added that the unnamed donor justified the contribution by arguing that many entrepreneurs accumulated their wealth in the 1990s with the state’s assistance, thus viewing such contributions as a duty.
Reports Indicate Demands for Significant Contributions
According to various reports, billionaire Suleiman Kerimov has pledged a substantial sum of 100 billion rubles (approximately 1.1 billion Euros). The concept of these donations is said to have originated from Igor Sechin, a long-standing advisor to Putin, known for his role in the pursuit of oligarch Mikhail Khodorkovsky and the subsequent dismantling of his oil company, Yukos, from which state-owned Rosneft was built.
More than four years after the initial invasion, the Kremlin has yet to achieve its war objectives, and the financial burden continues to mount. Nearly 40 percent of Russia’s budget expenditures are now allocated to military, security, and defense sectors. The Russian economy is grappling with Western sanctions, declining revenues from oil and gas exports, and a general economic slowdown affecting other tax receipts. The government has already increased value-added tax to help finance the war effort.
Despite the country’s war economy operating at full capacity, economic forecasts remain gloomy. The OECD, for instance, projects Russia’s economic growth to be only 0.6 percent this year, a decrease from 1.0 percent last year. Furthermore, the Russian government is reportedly preparing for a potential 10 percent cut across all non-security-related expenditures. This decision may hinge on a sustained rise in oil prices, although Russia’s immediate benefit from this is limited. Recent Ukrainian drone attacks have reportedly incapacitated at least 40 percent of Russia’s oil export capacity this week, leading to the suspension of oil loading at key Baltic Sea ports like Primorsk and Ust-Luga.
