April 23, 2026
DIANE FRANCIS
Russia cannot capitalize on the latest oil price windfall because its economy has become Putin’s biggest war casualty. The country is not on the brink of sudden collapse like 1991, but its current predicament is far more dangerous. It is in a slow-motion, irreversible meltdown. Revenues shrink, reserves drop, its civilian economy is hollowed out, its regions are more impoverished than ever, debts soar, and its future financial capacity is disappearing. Russia projects itself as a superpower, but is now a third-world nation with nukes, and it is now circling the drain. Its GDP per capita ranks 86th globally, and is falling, a trajectory that cannot be reversed. Unfortunately, Putin can still fund his genocide in Ukraine, but ruins Russia’s future. His war has cannibalized the economy and driven it into a state of terminal decline, a condition described by economists as the “death zone”. Even if the war ended tomorrow, Russia will be a stagnant basket case indefinitely.
Russia exhibits all of the classic “death zone” symptoms: The war effort siphons funds away from education, pensions, healthcare, and infrastructure. Ukraine’s drone attacks on oil facilities have cut exports in half. Inflation and interest rates soar along with business bankruptcies. Its National Wealth Fund totaled US$117 billion in liquid assets before the war and fell to US$47.8 billion in April 2026. This will disappear quickly given current conditions. The size of its economy shrinks, and growth has disappeared. Oil revenues are down 45% from last year, and export revenues are the lowest in years. The trade surplus disappears, and the budget collapses. The official deficit is 1.6% of GDP, but it is closer to 4%. Debts rise, and servicing costs are double what they were in 2021.
None of this is sustainable, and digging out, once the war ends, will take decades. No entity will provide reparations for the odious regime, and the capital carnage mounts as it continues. Estimates are that the cost to Russia of bypassing sanctions (paying exorbitant amounts to shadow fleets and smugglers to get oil to market) is at least US$25 billion per year. Projections indicate that by 2030, Russia will have lost US$136 billion in export earnings, and its energy sector will have incurred more than US$200 billion in damages and losses. Imports cost more than ever, customers have fled or been attacked, and technology is scarce.
War economies destroy wealth creation by investing in weapons and manpower that are obliterated on the battlefield. The war has hollowed out a generation of young Russian men, caused severe labor shortages, a brain drain, and mass emigration. This has left behind an aging population, a weak technology sector, and global isolation. The war is a demographic wrecking ball: More than one million dead, wounded, and permanently disabled, and birth rates are at historic lows. One analyst said Russia’s economy is a classic example of a war-induced “low-growth trap”.
On April 20, Sweden’s military intelligence chief Thomas Nilsson itemized how Moscow is lying about its economic condition to hide its staggering budget deficit, debts, and the costs of
sanctions imposed by the West. He wrote that Russia’s reported inflation of 5.8% was actually 15%; its deficits were billions higher than stated; its war production was losing millions and was corrupt; a banking crisis was imminent, and the country “is living on borrowed time”. In 2022, its GDP was equivalent in size to the State of Texas, and by now it is likely the size of a Houston suburb.
Little wonder why, in March, Putin shut down the Internet in Moscow and St. Petersburg as news spread about hardships, bankruptcies, wartime disasters, and high-profile criminal convictions of Putin cronies engaged in war-related corruption. But the pain is not shared in Russia. These two cities, populated with white Slavs, have been spared military conscription and the devastation the war has caused in the country’s remote regions. Those people in the Caucasus, Siberia, or the Urals carry the burden of the war. Their health and education budgets have been diverted to pay for military costs. And most of Putin’s cannon fodder has been recruited from their villages and towns, and hundreds of thousands have returned home in caskets.
Ending the Ukraine War won’t fix Russia. Structural changes have made Moscow too dependent upon Beijing. It now sells Russian raw materials at deep discounts out of desperation and buys Chinese goods at inflated prices, particularly components needed in electronics, auto manufacturing, and technology. This is the result of Putin’s “pivot to the east” that he claimed was necessary after he lost his biggest energy market, Europe, by invading Ukraine. Even Russian bootleg crude is losing value, and in January, it was forced to sell oil at US$22 a barrel, or a third of the market rate. And its “allies” — Iran, Venezuela, and Cuba — cannot help because they are under siege from America.
Nilsson also noted that oil prices would have to remain more than US$100 a barrel indefinitely in order for Russia to pay debts and rebuild an economy post-war. This means that Russia’s situation will deteriorate dramatically once the Iran conflict ends and oil prices stabilize. Worse, Ukraine steadily destroys its oil facilities and industrial base, which were dependent upon state bank lending. Putin also destroyed any foreign investment potential by confiscating billions in assets after the 2022 invasion began. These corporations won’t be back anytime soon.
The center won’t hold once the war is lost, as happened following Moscow’s Afghanistan debacle. Putin will disappear, and the Russian Federation along with it, as it dissolves into pieces. Putin and his oligarchy will flee to tax and extradition havens. Then the West must ensure that the Mafia State is dismantled. If that happens, the world will be more secure than ever since the Second World War ended. Russia will have no cards, except for some resource deposits that will be given away to the lowest bidders. “The Russian Empire must cease to exist as a political entity, and something may be built on its ruins,” said Russian chess master and political activist Garry Kasparov. “Defeat in Ukraine is existential because it means that Putin’s regime will no longer be a threat to the rest of the world”.