The Russian economy shrank by 0.2 percent in the first quarter of 2026, its first quarterly contraction in three years amid mounting strain from the Ukraine war and sanctions, official data showed Friday.

This compares to an expansion of 1.4 percent between January-March last year, data from Russia’s Rosstat statistics service showed.

The Kremlin has spent heavily on its offensive in Ukraine — outlays that initially boosted economic growth but have driven up inflation and caused labour shortages in non-military sectors of the economy.

Earlier this week, Russia slashed its growth forecast for 2026 to 0.4 percent from 1.3 percent.

Russian President Vladimir Putin said earlier Friday that economic growth had returned in March after two months of contraction.

“It is essential that the emerging positive trend be consolidated and extended to more and more industries and sectors,” he told economic officials.

Russia’s central bank said on Thursday that the contraction in the first quarter could be a one-off occurrence, as heavy snowfall in January and February disrupted construction and dampened consumer activity.

Higher oil prices on the back of war in the Middle East have offered the Russian economy some short-term respite, but structural issues such as stubborn inflation, labour shortages and bloated military spending remain.

Ukrainian attacks on oil infrastructure have also weighed on Russian crude exports in recent months.

The central bank has kept borrowing costs elevated to tame inflation.

Source: Insider Paper