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That's quite interesting. I guess Russia has always maintained a fairly large military capacity, so maybe they didn't need to ramp it up like other nations tend to.
I see they had about a year of contraction, before this growth. That makes me wonder if it's their economy reorienting to being cutoff from the West. There must be a bunch of service industry that had to be developed domestically, but first their sectors that were connected to Europe had to contract.
yes, the contraction is clearly rooted in the sanctions policy and the section from the european economy. but the rapid integration into the brics area that Putin is driving forward seems to be compensating for this very quickly
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Have you read anything about regional growth differences? It would be really interesting to see if the Asian parts of Russia are outgrowing the European parts.
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Unfortunately, I can't say for sure, but what I can say is that the large economic regions of St Petersburg, Moscow and Kaliningrad are extremely prosperous.
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I've always wondered how Russia has managed to hold on to Kaliningrad.
Are they isolated or is it easy to travel in and out?
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There is a road connection there that is secured by the military.
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Why didn't it become independent or part of a neighboring country when the Soviet Union dissolved?
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42 sats \ 1 reply \ @TomK OP 15 Jun
just as the large Black Sea fleet is based in Crimea, Russia has for a long time maintained a large fleet and military bases in Kaliningrad and the region. these were things that were not negotiable
Some insiders tell the story that to fight sanctions and price growth all tariffs and limits on import were canceled. This is why sometimes life actually became cheaper in Russian Federation.
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That's quite interesting.
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