Paul Goble
Staunton, Feb. 9 – Russia’s economy has transitioned “from a model based on the export of raw materials and integrated into the global chains of the consumer market” into “a model of centralized and mobilized administration of resources where the priorities are defined not by market forces but by the logic of government priorities.,” Dmitry Prokofyev says.
The economics editor of Novaya Gazeta says that the result is not simply slowed growth across the board but the division of the economy “into two parallel but weakly connected economic subsistems which show diametrically opposite trends” (novayagazeta.ru/articles/2026/02/09/arkhipelag-rosta-v-okeane-stagnatsii).
One, which enjoys the support of the government, continues to grow relatively well because of subsidies, while the other, which doesn’t, shows declines, thus forming “islands of growth in an ocean of stagnation,” something that is obscured by figures for the economy as a whole, like measuring the average temperature in a hospital.
Once this pattern is recognized, the economist says, it is quite easy to understand what is going on; but if one doesn’t recognize the pattern or refuses to do so because of pressure from the powers that be or the impact of regime propaganda, then nothing makes sense – and one falls victim to Kremlin claims that the economy is doing better than most people feel.
In a 4500-word article, Prokofyev documents this divide, something that allows him to conclude with the following damning observation: “Rosstat data for 2025 do not record a temporary aberration or cyclical slowdown, but the final consolidation and institutionalization of this architecture.”
In fact, he continues, “the division of the national economic mechanism into two economies—one for the state and the elites serving it, and one for the rest of the population—has ceased to be a trend and has become a systemic, fundamental, and integral quality of the Russian economic model.”
And that means this: “future dynamics will be determined not by market forces, consumer optimism, or private investment, but solely by the volume and efficiency of resource use, which the state is willing and able to continually redistribute from the "continent of stagnation" to the "archipelago of growth" and to the "islands of stability" to maintain a fragile, but, as the figures show, still sustainable, balance between these two worlds.”
“This balance,” Prokofyev says, “is both the main achievement and the main challenge of Russia's new economic reality in 2026.”