Russian government explores way to make ends meet as budget deadline looms

By Darya Korsunskaya

MOSCOW (Reuters) -The Russian government is considering raising the rate of value-added tax to keep the budget deficit in check and maintain reserves, four sources told Reuters, despite public assurances from President Vladimir Putin that there will be no tax rises.

The draft budget is expected to be submitted to parliament on September 29. Its key components are agreed with Putin beforehand and are unlikely to be significantly altered during the formal parliamentary debate.

Russia, in the fourth year of its war in Ukraine, has raised personal income and corporate taxes this year, but the government still had to triple its federal budget deficit estimate to 1.7% of gross domestic product (GDP) in May.

It is now set to exceed that target, according to an unnamed official quoted by state media this month. The 0.9% of GDP deficit for 2026 included in a budget law last year also looks likely to be exceeded.

INCREASE COULD HALVE THE PROJECTED BUDGET DEFICIT

Four sources close to the government confirmed a report this week by The Bell, a media outlet based outside Russia, that the government is discussing lifting the value-added tax (VAT) rate to 22% from 20% to curb the deficit.

The report did not specify a possible timeline for a decision but one of the sources told Reuters it was being considered for the 2026 budget as long as the budget rule which sets aside windfall oil revenues remains in place.

“How can the deficit be reduced while adhering to the budget rule? Only by raising taxes, because there’s hardly anything left to cut, either military spending or social spending,” one source said.

VAT accounted for 37% of federal budget revenues in 2024 and the possible increase could halve the projected 2026 deficit, according to Reuters calculations.

Russia’s economy has continued to grow despite tightening Western sanctions over the war in Ukraine. But GDP is expected to slow to around 1% from 4.3% last year and inflation remains above 8% in a country where much of the workforce and 40% of revenues now go to defence and security.

Government spending is the key driver of economic growth in Russia, and with Putin expressing displeasure at the economic slowdown and the need to continue financing the war of attrition in Ukraine, spending cuts are unlikely.

NO FINAL DECISION YET

Finance Minister Anton Siluanov has insisted that the budget rule, under which energy revenues collected above Russia’s target oil price, currently $60 per barrel, are directed to the fiscal reserve fund, will remain in place.

After Russia sent troops into Ukraine in 2022, Western nations prohibited insurers and maritime service providers from facilitating Russian oil exports unless they were below $60 a barrel. India boosted its Russian oil imports sharply but now faces pressure from U.S. President Donald Trump to halt them.

The Russian fund, which is separate to the country’s central bank reserves, currently has about 4 trillion roubles in liquid assets, which can also be used to cover the deficit. This year the government plans to tap the fund for 447 billion roubles.

Putin, who in 2024 pledged no major changes to the tax system before 2030 following the tax hikes, which were introduced in 2025, has asked the government on September 5 to increase revenues through higher productivity, not taxes.

The source who said there was little room for cuts in the federal budget, argued that military spending could not be cut and minor cuts in the social sphere would not help much.

“It is like shearing a piglet—lots of squealing, not much use. If we could cut 1–2 trillion roubles, sure, but you can’t cut amounts like that, they just aren’t there. You can trim a few million, maybe hundreds,” the source said.

GROWING CONCERN ABOUT THE BUDGET

A two percentage point 2019 VAT hike contributed 0.6 percentage points to inflation that year, according to the central bank, which has pledged to halve inflation to return it to its 4% target.

However, central bank governor Elvira Nabiullina cautiously backed a tax increase, saying after the September 12 board meeting that it was better to raise extra revenue than to widen the deficit.

She linked the size of the deficit to the central bank’s ability to cut rates further from the current 17%, a level economists see as too high to revive growth.

Putin has said that Russia’s low level of debt allows it to borrow more and that new debt should not be feared, but rates even for the government are around 13%, with interest expenses expected to reach 2% of GDP in 2025.

(Writing by Gleb Bryanski; editing by Philippa Fletcher)

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