Federal budget of Russia

The federal budget of Russia (Russian: федеральный бюджет России) is the leading element of the budget system of Russia. The federal budget is a major state financial plan for the fiscal year, which has the force of law after its approval by the Russian parliament and signed into law by the President of Russia. That the federal budget is the primary means of redistribution of national income and gross domestic product through it mobilized the financial resources necessary to regulate the country's economic development, social policy and the strengthening of the national defense. The share of federal budget accounts for a significant portion of the distribution process, which is the allocation of funds between sectors of the economy, manufacturing and industrial areas, regions of the country.

The right of the Russian Federation for an independent federal budget is enshrined by Article 71 of the Russian Constitution and the Budget Code of Russia that regulates the details of its formation and execution.

Process

No later than October 1st, the Russian government prepares and introduces a draft federal budget for the next fiscal year to the State Duma.

The federal budget is considered by the State Duma in three readings (amendments to the Code). At first reading, the basic parameters of the budget are adopted. According to the Budget Code, during the first reading of the State Duma has the right to increase revenues and the federal budget deficit, if these changes are not the endorsement of the government. The State Duma can reject the draft budget. In this case, a conciliation commission in conjunction with the government. In the second reading of the State Duma approves the budget section by section, and the third is on the budget law as a whole. Following the adoption of the State Duma the federal budget, the law goes to the Federation Council, the upper house of the parliament, and then signed into law by the President.

Structure

Difficulties in implementing fiscal reforms aimed at raising government revenues and a dependence on short-term borrowing to finance budget deficits led to a serious financial crisis in 1998. The Russian economy bounced back quickly from the 1998 crisis and enjoyed over 9 years of sustained growth averaging about 7% due to a devalued ruble, implementation of key economic reforms (taxation, banking, labor and land codes), tight fiscal policy, and favorable commodities prices.

Data by decade

2000–2009

Russia ran a budget surplus from 2001 to 2008 when a financial crisis occurred.

Although the government revised its budget projections during 2009 to reflect lower oil prices and the effects of the economic crisis, it ended the year with a budget deficit amounting to 7.9% of GDP, which it financed from the Reserve Fund, one of the government's two stabilization funds. The government's anti-crisis package in 2008 and 2009 amounted to about 6.7% of GDP, according to World Bank estimates. The package provided support to the financial sector and enterprises through liquidity injections to banks and tax cuts/fiscal support to enterprises as well as modest support for households and small and medium enterprises and increased unemployment benefits.

The highest rate of increased fiscal revenues associated with the production and export of mineral resources (tax on mineral extraction, oil export duties, etc.). In particular, the 2008 federal budget of Russia was formed on 50% oil and gas revenues (in 2006 the share of oil and gas revenues accounted for more than half, in 2003 it accounted for a quarter of the total income).

2010–2019

In 2016, the Russian budget deficit reached $21 billion. It was expected to rise to $21.7 billion in the year. 2016 budget revenues were estimated to be 13.7 trillion rubles (200 billion US dollars) or 17.5% of GDP, while spending is planned to be 16 trillion rubles (roughly 233 billion dollars)[1] or 20.5% of GDP. The budget deficit is thus 2.35 trillion rubles (33 billion dollars) or 3% of GDP.[2]

2020–present

In 2021 the budget was set:[3]

  • 2022 Revenues 25.2 trillion rubles ($341 billion). Expenses 23.6 trillion rubles ($343 billion). Surplus 1.4 trillion rubles ($15.2 billion)
  • 2023 Revenues 25.5 trillion rubles ($349 billion). Expenses 25.1 trillion rubles ($343 billion). Surplus 0.4 trillion rubles ($5.9 billion)
  • 2024 Revenues 25.8 trillion rubles ($352 billion). Expenses 26.1 trillion rubles ($357 billion). Deficit 0.3 trillion rubles ($4.3 billion)

As of autumn 2022 Russia was estimated to possess nearly $549 billion in foreign exchange reserves, but some 50% of that total has been frozen by foreign countries friendly to Ukraine. In 2021, the federal budget totalled to $340 billion.[4] Because Russian President Vladimir Putin earned international pariah status for his country, thus causing International sanctions during the Russo-Ukrainian War to be applied, budgetary shortfalls would normally need to be covered by the Russian National Wealth Fund, said Finance Minister Anton Siluanov.[5]

Since the war in Ukraine, the Russian government has gone out of its way to conceal its actual spending figures. The last reliable data we have from Russia goes back to 2021[6] which showed nearly 50 trillion Rubles in spending. In 2023 the Russian finance minister stated that the planned surplus of 1.4 trillion rubles from the 2022 budget had become a 3.3 trillion ruble deficit over the same period.[7] In addition the Russian finance minister reported in April that the deficit in the first quarter of 2023 was 2.4 trillion against the expected yearly surplus of 0.4 trillion rubles.[8] Alex Isakov forecasts the 2023 expenditures to be 31 trillion rubles, with a deficit of 6.9 trillion.[9] The declared results to June 2023 shows a budget deficit of 2.59 trillion ruble ($28 billion).[10]

More than 20 million people in Russia (14 percent of the population) live below the poverty line, and the invasion of Ukraine is prioritized ahead of education, health care, infrastructure, social payments and highways, railroads, bridges, airports, and other basic infrastructure.[11]

See also

References

Public Domain This article incorporates public domain material from U.S. Bilateral Relations Fact Sheets. United States Department of State.

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