Russia to Run Out of Foreign Reserves in 18 Months

Image: Russia to Run Out of Foreign Reserves in 18 Months

By F McGuire   |   Monday, 25 Jan 2016 08:40 AM

"The last time oil prices dropped so low and stayed there, in the 1980s, the Soviet Union disintegrated. Steadily rising prices since 2000 have lifted Russia out of poverty and economic chaos, buoying the prosperity of many Russians with it. Putin was lucky enough to be president for much of that period, but he now faces an extended decline, with real incomes shrinking," the Times explained.

But Forbes Contributor Mark Adomanis asks: Does any of this matter?

"The fact that the (Russian) Central Bank still has a sizable (if reduced) pile of money sitting around won’t do very much to help the average Russian citizen, whose living standards have been battered by a nasty combination of high inflation, rising unemployment, and deepening recession," he wrote.

"That, of course, doesn’t make the current problems any less real, but it does make the ongoing crisis very different from Russia’s experience during the last plunge in oil prices in the late 1990s," he wrote. "Expect Russia’s recession to have a significant political impact, but don’t expect to see a messy collapse of the current system," he wrote.

Meanwhile, U.S. financier George Soros said that Russia's international reserves were sufficient enough for the near future under the conditions of unfavorable economic environment. According to Soros, Russia's international reserves would be enough for two years. International reserves consist of foreign currency, special drawing rights, a reserve position in the IMF and monetary gold.

(Newsmax wire services contributed to this report).
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