Don't sweat the small stuff! According to Friday's Globe and Mail: "Russia isn't facing a recession, its facing extinction".
The article is behind their usual firewall, so a few quick highlights:
Russia faces a grim future, regardless of what happens to oil prices, Western sanctions or President Vladimir Putin and his cronies. Sooner or later, it will be done in by unfavourable demographics, rising ethnic divisions and a permanently busted economy.
That’s the harsh assessment of geopolitical strategist Peter Zeihan. The veteran Russia watcher has long been pessimistic about the country’s future. Four years ago, he warned that Russia was “in a long, slow twilight. They're going to have a couple of great years while the Europeans are in a mess. And they have relative strength because the Americans are distracted in the Middle East. But they realize that they're on borrowed time.” ....
Russia’s leadership “is convinced that this is the last government of Russia. They see this as the last regime,” Mr. Zeihan says in a phone interview from his office in Austin, Tex. And what’s more, he insists, the people who govern the country are right to be so bearish about the future....
If the Kremlin can manage to restore a semblance of the old Soviet Union by pulling Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Belarus, the Baltics and other former satellites back into the fold and perhaps go a bit further by encroaching into Romania and Poland, “then they’ll last probably 50 years. If they can’t get out to those borders, they’ll probably not last 20. In the end, I think that they’re going to fail.”....
“When you’re convinced you’re going to die, a recession is no big deal. Remember, they’re expecting to be the government that turns the lights out,” says Mr. Zeihan a former senior analyst with Stratfor, a strategic intelligence firm, and the author of a new book titled The Accidental Superpower. ...
But don't worry its not all bad news:
"On the plus side, a high mortality rate among people in their 50s and 60s means the Kremlin can continue to redirect hundreds of billions of surplus rubles earmarked for the state pension fund. So actual reserves may be two to three times higher than the $300-billion (U.S.) or so estimated by analysts. It’s an unfortunate source of emergency funding western countries with their growing numbers of longer-living retired people can only dream of."