Russia

Russian officials, businesses and media have been reporting shortages of workers across different sectors of the economy for over a year.Now some are saying that the reality of labor deficit is a new reality that the country will have to live with in the coming years."There will never be cheap labor in our country again," said Dmitry Sergienkov, CEO of Russia's leading online recruitment platform HeadHunter, in a September interview with the Kommersant business daily.According to Sergienkov, Russia's labor force has shrunk by 1 million in the past two years because the smaller, often more demanding generation of workers born in the 1990s cannot replace retirees a situation that is set to worsen over the next five years.Sergienkovs observations are backed up by trends in data.Russia's gross labor turnover rate, which shows the ratio of the workers fired and hired to the average labor force, rose to 65% in 2023, a record level for the entire post-Soviet period, according to a study by Moscows Higher School of Economics.
The higher the figure, the more workers are leaving and being hired by companies than are staying put.In the months between June and August, Russia's monthly unemployment rate fell to a historic low of 2.4%, official statistics show.Against this backdrop, Russian companies sweeten the conditions for new employees, while casting a wider net in terms of who they want to attract to work for them such as older jobseekers.Russian officials expect real wages, or average wages adjusted for inflation, to rise by 9.2% in 2024 compared to an 8.2% increase in 2023.For the three years prior, Russian real wages stagnated below 5% when adjusted for inflation.By 2027, the average monthly salary in Russia will amount to 100,000 rubles ($1,040), the Economic Development Ministry forecast.This growth is already evident for those within Russia who have had to switch jobs.It has become easier to get a job paying 100,000 rubles (about $1,026) a month generally regarded as the threshold for making ends meet in Moscow and other major Russian cities."Everything is getting more expensive, but wages are growing a bit faster," a jobseeker in the advertising sector who recently received several offers from Moscow companies told The Moscow Times.Why is there a shortage of workers?The determining reason for the current labor trends is the changing structure of labor demand, first affected by the pandemic and then by Western sanctions over the 2022 full-scale offensive on Ukraine, Rostislav Kapelushnikov, the countrys top labor expert, said in his research.In both the pandemic and the war, Russian companies in certain industries needed more workers than they could easily find due to a relatively tight labor pool.During the Covid pandemic, it was companies doing business online that received a strong boost to expand production.
This trend continued after people were released from lockdown with savings to spend.Russia is one of several countries where the Covid crisis drove unemployment down.But Russia is a unique case, as the invasion of Ukraine sparked an increase in demand for labor in the industries affected by the war, and ushered in a major period of structural adjustment in the economy.The war and the ensuing exodus of Western companies led to pent-up demand from the military-industrial complex, government agencies, parallel importers and companies that managed to occupy the niches left by the exiting foreign companies, Kopelushnikov said.A study by the To Be Exact website found a spike in wage increases in municipalities with military production facilities, while the media report anecdotal evidence of Russians gaining opportunities to make money in regions plagued by post-Soviet industrial decline.What next?In order to bring the labor market into equilibrium, either the supply of labor has to increase or the demand for labor has to cool down.According to Kapelushnikov, it is unlikely that the labor supply will increase in the short term.A man works at Cherepovets Steel Mill in Cherepovets.Sergei Karpukhin / TASS For example, it might require young people to refrain from attending university which would deal a blow to the development of human capital or a sharp increase in migration, which would be limited by the likely closing of the wage gap between Central Asian countries and Russia and by Moscow's restrictions on migration.A more likely scenario is that the demand for more workers will slow down as thriving companies fill their vacancies, while firms in less thriving sectors will no longer be able to attract new workers at wages above inflation, Kapelushnikov said.This, in turn, will lead to these companies scaling back their hiring plans, reducing demand for new staff and pushing down prices for labor.The current surge in wages is supported primarily by government spending and shows signs of a "bubble, economist Natalya Zubarevich said in a recent interview with Russian Bild."The dampening effect will slowly manifest itself, because this crazy increase [in wages] is not supported by labor productivity growth, but is the result of huge [injections] of money, mainly from the federal budget, into the economy, mainly into the military-industrial complex, but spreading to other types of activity," she said.According to Zubarevich, many companies will stop raising wages in the future, with inflation eating into workers' real incomes.





Unlimited Portal Access + Monthly Magazine - 12 issues


Contribute US to Start Broadcasting - It's Voluntary!


ADVERTISE


Merchandise (Peace Series)

 


Russia Claims New Village in Ukraine’s Donetsk Region


[Russia] - Moscow Blames Sanctions for Russia-UN Food Deal Collapse


[Russia] - Russia Says Foreign Minister Lavrov Met Kim Jong Un


[Russia] - Ukraine Says 6 Killed in Massive Russian Drone, Missile Attack


[Russia] - Conference Seeks Solidarity Among Indigenous Peoples of Russia, Ukraine and Central Asia


Russia and Belarus to Develop AI Rooted in 'Traditional Values'


[Russia] - Russia's FM Lavrov Arrives in North Korea


Russia Orders Closure of Polish Consulate in Kaliningrad


[Russia] - Elite Russian Marine Unit Commander Reportedly Killed in Ukrainian Missile Strike


Russia Nationalizes Country’s Third-Largest Gold Producer


[Russia] - Russia Weighs Scrapping Its Only Aircraft Carrier After Years of Restoration Delays


Border Defense Fraud Probe Targets Belgorod Region Officials – Kommersant


[Russia] - Dutch Court Sentences Russian to 3 Years for Sharing Microchip Technology


Peskov Defends Russia’s Media Crackdown as Part of ‘Information War’


[Russia] - Starovoit Buried at Historic St. Petersburg Cemetery Days After Suspected Suicide


[Russia] - Ukrainian Attacks on Western Russia Kill At Least 3


[Russia] - Russian Military Personnel Costs Hit Record High-- Analysis


[Russia] - St. Petersburg Court Drops 'LGBT Propaganda' Case Against Popular Bookstore


[Russia] - Russian Police Offered Bonuses to Recruit Detainees for Ukraine War-- Vyorstka


[Russia] - Ukrainian Attack on Belgorod Region Kills 2, Governor Says


[Russia] - Russian State Media Turns on Trump After Putin Criticism


[Russia] - Putin Skips Memorial Service for Ex-Transportation Minister, Sends Wreath Instead


[Russia] - 'We Are Being Held Without Protection': North Caucasus Women Decry Dire Conditions in Kurdish-Run Syrian Camps


[Russia] - Rubio and Lavrov Held 'Frank Exchange' on Sidelines of ASEAN Summit, Moscow Says


[Russia] - Moscow Swelters in Heat Wave After Powerful Storms Batter the City


Nizhny Novgorod Region Rolls Back Migrant Work Ban Amid Labor Shortages


[Russia] - Russian Basketball Player Arrested in France at Request of United States


Gelendzhik Airport to Reopen More Than 3 Years After Wartime Closure


[Russia] - Moscow Theatre Director Questioned in Large-Scale Embezzlement Probe


Russia Adds Entrepreneur Kidnapped at Moscow Train Station to ‘Terrorists and Extremists’ List


[Russia] - Death by Falling: A Timeline of Cases Across Russia and Abroad


[Russia] - Russia to Launch Direct Flights From Moscow to North Korean Capital on July 27


Crimean Woman Fined Over $1K for Posting Photos of Men in Wedding Dresses Online


[Russia] - Leading European Court Rules Russia Committed Rights Abuses in Ukraine, Downing of MH17


[Russia] - Rangers Kill 11 Brown Bears Lured by Food Waste in Russia's Far East


Russia Reopens Embassy in Tehran 2 Weeks After Israel-Iran Ceasefire


[Russia] - Kremlin Brushes Off Trump's 'Tough Talk' and Claims 'No Disagreement' on Ukraine Negotiations


[Russia] - Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov to Visit North Korea This Weekend


[Russia] - Russian Lawmakers Greenlight Restoration of FSB-Run Prison Network


[Russia] - FSB Agents Shoot and Kill Man Accused of Planning Bridge Bombing in Saratov Region


[Russia] - Russian Military Launches Largest-Ever Air Attack on Ukraine


Ukrainian Drone Attack on Kursk City Beach Kills 4, Governor Says


[Russia] - Russian Broadcaster RTVI Starts Airing in Mali


[Russia] - Trump Accuses Putin of Talking 'Bulls ***' on Ukraine


[Russia] - Russia Plans USAID-Inspired Development Model in Bid to Extend Global Influence


FSB Accuses Ex-Independent Media Manager of Treason


Russia Blacklists Yale University as ‘Undesirable’ Organization


[Russia] - Ignore Donald Trump's 'Political Seesaw,' Russia's Medvedev Says


Russian Military Drone Crashes Into Dacha in Republic of Tatarstan


Nadezhdin Campaign Manager Stripped of Russian Citizenship


Who Was Roman Starovoit, the Sacked Transportation Minister Found Dead in Apparent Suicide


[Russia] - Russian Tour Companies Introduce Trips to Taliban-Ruled Afghanistan for $3K


Lavrov Names Sanctions Relief and Return of Frozen Assets as Preconditions for Ukraine Ceasefire


[Russia] - Former Russian National Guard Official Arrested on Bribery, Abuse of Power Charges


[Russia] - Black Sea Oil Spill Reaches Abkhazia's Shores


[Russia] - Russian Anti-Terrorism Police Warn of Foreign Spying Disguised as Photo Contests


Russian Army Says It Seized First Village in Ukraine’s Dnipropetrovsk Region


[Russia] - Former Transportation Minister Roman Starovoit Found Dead With Gunshot Wound After Being Sacked by Putin


[Russia] - Russia Targets Emigres in Kazakhstan With Back Tax Demands


Ukrainian Drone Attacks Trigger Major Flight Disruptions at Russia’s Busiest Airports


[Russia] - New Details Emerge in Bribery Case Against Rusagro Founder


[Russia] - Far-Flung Kamchatka Peninsula Restricts Mobile Internet to Thwart Alleged Ukrainian Sabotage


Rosstat Stops Publishing Monthly Population Data Amid War Deaths, Demographic Crisis


[Russia] - Russian Gold Mining Tycoon Barred From Leaving Country Amid Nationalization Efforts


Putin Sacks Transportation Minister Roman Starovoit


[Russia] - Ukraine Says 4 Killed, Over 30 Wounded in Russian Strikes


Russia Says Captured 2 More East Ukraine Settlements in Donetsk and Kharkiv Regions


UN Condemns Russia's Largest Drone Assault on Ukraine