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Russian Official: Economy May Need Stimulus Measures


Russia's economy is at risk of sliding into recession by autumn and the government may need to implement stimulus measures to shore up growth, Economy Minister Andrei Belousov said on Friday.

"We are not in recession for now, but we may get there - there is such a risk,'' Belousov told reporters, a day after his ministry slashed its growth forecast. "I think that, if by autumn we don't see growth for some period, we may slide into recession.''

A year after Vladimir Putin returned to the Kremlin with calls for a "new economy'' to boost investment and shake up state-run industries, Russia's $2.1 trillion economy is close to stagnating.

The Economy Ministry on Thursday cut its growth forecast for this year by a third to 2.4 percent, which would be Russia's worst showing since 2009, when the economy contracted sharply as a result of the global financial crisis.

Russia's GDP grew at around one percent in the first quarter, weighed down by lacklustre investment and a decline in exports of strategic commodities such as natural gas that were hit by a slump in the European market.

The debt crisis in euro zone member Cyprus, a financial centre through which a quarter of Russian foreign investment and lending flows, has heightened concerns, meanwhile, that the Russian economy will be starved of capital.

Stimulus near?

Belousov's warning is part of a debate over whether the economy needs monetary stimulus to boost growth nearer to the Kremlin's target rate of 5 percent.

Putin's choice to run the central bank, Elvira Nabiullina, has emphasised growth as a key policy goal and dialled back ambitions for reducing inflation that, at over 7 percent, is now running above target.

Economists expect the central bank to cut rates at the latest when Nabiullina takes office in June, although with Russia on the brink of stagflation many argue that structural reforms, not rate cuts, are what the economy really needs.

Russia instituted a new fiscal rule last year that ties spending to a historical average of prices for oil - Russia's main export - while capping the budget deficit at 1 percent of gross domestic product.

That may restrict the government's ability to ramp up state spending, but does not rule out other measures designed to improve Russia's investment climate and boost the flow of credit into the economy.

"We will propose economic stimulus measures. We will have a meeting with the president,'' said Belousov. "Measures should be taken, as we need to solve the situation we got into in order not to slide into recession.''

Russia's post-crisis recovery has been heavily dependent on the consumer, while a hefty increase in government spending before Putin's election in March 2012 to a third Kremlin term also kept the economy ticking over.

The weakening outlook does not necessarily herald a full-blown recession, defined in economics textbooks as two consecutive quarters of negative growth.

The government is, meanwhile, considering ramping up sales of state assets to raise funds that could be committed to stimulus spending, including the possible sale of a 19.5 percent stake in state oil major Rosneft.

"Although we don't expect Russia to fall into recession-authorities' concerns are understandable and a moderate monetary or fiscal stimulus would be appropriate, in our view,'' said Anatoliy Shal, chief economist at J.P. Morgan in Moscow.

"In fiscal policy, using back door to bypass the budget rule would be one way to respond to economic weakness,'' Shal added.
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    Reuters

    Reuters is a news agency founded in 1851 and owned by the Thomson Reuters Corporation based in Toronto, Canada. One of the world's largest wire services, it provides financial news as well as international coverage in over 16 languages to more than 1000 newspapers and 750 broadcasters around the globe.

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