How a worker exodus is wrecking the Russian economy – and Putin’s war
Russian soldiers march toward Red Square to attend a Victory Day military parade in Moscow, Russia
After mass conscription in Russia there aren't enough workers to fill the jobs available - AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko

Vladimir Putin’s problems are mounting. The Russian President is still reeling from this month’s mutiny by mercenary group Wagner.

The Kremlin is burning through its rainy day fund to bankroll its invasion of Ukraine, and the country has been forced to sell oil at a discount to the likes of India and China.

But another problem is emerging as one of the biggest threats facing the Russian economy. After mass conscription – and an exodus of talented Russians fearful of the war’s impact – there simply aren’t enough workers to fill the jobs available.

Goldman Sachs describes it as the “most binding constraint on the Russian economy”, even ahead of sanctions-related restrictions on capital or technology. With more than two vacancies for every Russian worker, the jobs market is twice as tight as in the UK, where wages have taken off.

Some workers have fled. Others have died on the front line. Many are still fighting. In the words of one economist, it has left companies “screaming” about the lack of young people available to fill roles. And it’s a problem that even the head of the country’s central bank has warned will stoke inflation.

“Whatever happens with the war, the implications of a shrinking workforce on Russia’s economy are extremely negative,” says Liam Peach at Capital Economics.

Putin, who has described Russia’s demographic challenge as one of the few things that keeps him up at night, speaks openly about the issue. In a typical 13-minute rant ahead of a meeting with top Kremlin officials, he admitted that the country’s top brass discuss the “shortage of personnel...all the time”.

Russian President Vladimir Putin
Lack of skilled workers is one of Putin’s toughest challenges, along with sanctions and discounting oil - Gavriil Grigorov/Pool Sputnik Kremlin

During the meeting attended by the Kremlin’s top economic chiefs and central bank boss Elvira Nabiullina, Putin said companies had hoarded labour after he invaded Ukraine as economic activity went into reverse.

Keen to hang on to their top talent, many employers asked workers to cut their hours. Bosses were happy because they kept skilled staff on their books, and workers were happy because at least they had money in the bank during the initial downturn.

But experts say that policy has helped to stoke the current crisis, with acute shortages in industries where they’re badly needed turning into a chronic malaise.

“Now the situation is fundamentally different,” the Russian President said. “There are simply not enough workers in many areas.”

Some are unlikely to ever come back. Russia’s communications ministry has admitted that about 10pc of its IT workforce left the country in 2022 and did not return. Hundreds of thousands of Russia’s brightest and best have followed suit.