Putin extols Russia's pandemic response as retail sales jump in April

Reuters

Published Jun 04, 2021 05:37AM ET

Updated Jun 04, 2021 09:37AM ET

By Alexander Marrow

MOSCOW (Reuters) -Russia's economy avoided catastrophe during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic and is now approaching pre-crisis levels, President Vladimir Putin said on Friday, an assertion backed up by data showing a 34.7% jump in retail sales in April.

Russia's commodity-dependent economy is on the mend after a 3% contraction in 2020, its sharpest in 11 years, when lockdown restrictions stifled economic activity, but officials say a recovery to levels of late 2019 is imminent.

Retail sales, a barometer of consumer demand and Russia's key economic driver, rose 34.7% in year-on-year terms, the Federal Statistics Service Rosstat said, beating a 23% increase forecast in a Reuters poll of analysts.

Rosstat also said Russia's real wages, adjusted for inflation and reported one month later than other indicators, rose 1.8% in March, below a Reuters poll foreseeing 2.1%.

"The Russian economy and labour market are already approaching pre-crisis levels," Putin said at the St Petersburg International Economic Forum, claiming that Russia had avoided a "catastrophe" despite last year's rise in unemployment and falling real incomes.

The unemployment rate peaked at 6.4% last year, but fell to a year low of 5.2% in April, data showed last month.

Economic growth and a recovery in living standards in Russia are a crucial issue for Putin and the United Russia ruling party. The latter is bracing for parliamentary elections in September after protests rocked the streets earlier this year.

Putin ordered that Russia's anti-crisis mortgage programme be extended by one year to July 2022, saying state-sponsored aid to support the construction sector and households could not be stopped abruptly.

He also proposed a new support mechanism for small- and medium-sized enterprises -- a loan guarantee with partner banks that could attract at least 600 billion roubles ($8.22 billion) in extra funds for smaller businesses by 2024 by giving them better access to credit.