News

Assets of many Western companies were expropriated and those of some major Russian businesses were seized by the state.
A slowdown exposes the limits of the country’s wartime economy and suggests sanctions may finally be taking a toll.
Russia's federal budget received 132 billion rubles from property sales.
The kind of bizarre performance of people at the St. Petersburg Economic Forum, when they started talking about the problems ...
Flattery and pressure — coupled with President Trump’s growing dissatisfaction with President Vladimir V. Putin — have helped ...
Russian consumers have been hit with a hefty spike in inflation, caused primarily by an increase in charges for utilities.
Fortress Russia’ uses a host of mechanisms to take major assets as Moscow weathers Western attempts to sink its economy.
Russia's new sanctions-busting method is "netting," an accounting tactic.
The conflict has been accompanied by a significant transfer of assets as many Western companies fled the Russian market ...
The U.S. secretary of state met with his Russian counterpart on the sidelines of a gathering of Southeast Asian nations, ...
Russia’s recognition of the Taliban provides much sought-after legitimacy to a regime that is enforcing the world’s most ...
Russian officials are telegraphing a slowdown of the country’s war economy -- the first major slump since the launch of the ...