By Anastasia Lyrchikova and Gleb Stolyarov
MOSCOW (Reuters) -From railways and automobiles to metals, coal, diamonds and cement, some of Russia’s biggest industrial companies are putting employees on furlough or cutting staff as the war economy slows, domestic demand stalls and exports dry up.
The efforts to reduce labour costs show the strain on Russia’s economy as President Vladimir Putin and the U.S.-led NATO military alliance square off in Ukraine, Europe’s deadliest conflict since World War Two.
Reuters identified six companies in Russia’s mining and transport sectors, many of them industrial titans, that have cut their working week in an attempt to reduce wage bills without raising unemployment, according to industry sources.
Cemros, Russia’s biggest cement maker, has moved to a 4-day week until the end of the year to preserve staff amid a sharp downturn in the construction industry and a rise in cement imports.
“This is a necessary anti-crisis measure,” said Cemros spokesman Sergei Koshkin. “The goal is to keep all our staff.” The company has 13,000 employees and 18 plants across Russia.
Koshkin said increased imports from countries including China, Iran and Belarus, combined with a drop in new houses being built, had curbed demand for cement. Cemros expects Russia to consume less than 60 million tonnes of cement this year, a figure last seen during the COVID pandemic.
The push to reduce wage bills shows the toll that conflict in Ukraine and Western sanctions are taking on corporate Russia and on the workers of its heavy industry plants, many of which were founded during Josef Stalin’s industrialisation of Soviet Russia in the 1930s.
Russia’s ministries of Labour and Industry did not respond to requests for comment on Reuters findings. The news agency reported in January that Putin had grown increasingly concerned about distortions in Russia’s economy, including the impact of high interest rates on its non-military sectors.
Russia’s Center for Macroeconomic Analysis and Short-term Forecasting – an influential research non-profit – said sectors of the economy not connected with the military had contracted by 5.4% since the start of the year. The Center forecasts a major slowdown in GDP growth to 0.7%-1.0% this year.
During Putin’s first two terms as president from 2000 to 2008, Russia’s economy soared to $1.7 trillion from less than $200 billion in 1999.
But Russia’s nominal GDP is now $2.2 trillion, about the same level it was in 2013, the year before Russia annexed Crimea.
