Russians' real disposable income plunged the most in 20 years in the second quarter, while the economy shrank by 9.6 per cent year-on-year as the country has been hit by low oil prices and the coronavirus pandemic.
Real disposable income has become one of the most socially-sensitive issues in Russia led by President Vladimir Putin, with the economy expected to contract by as much as 6 per cent this year.
The income fell 8 per cent in year-on-year terms in April-June, the state statistics service Rosstat said on Friday, adding that Russia's industrial output fell 9.4 per cent in June compared with a year ago.
It was the deepest quarterly decline of the income since 1999, according to the data on Rosstat's website.
In the second quarter, when health restrictions ravaged economic activity, the Russian economy shrank by 9.6 por cent year-on-year after growing 1.6 per cent in January-March, the economy ministry said separately.
The economy, however, was 6.4 per cent smaller in June than a year earlier following a sharper contraction -- revised to 10.7 per cent -- in May, when the country was partially locked-down to combat the spread of the coronavirus.
"The main factor for recovering economic activity in June was the continuing removal of quarantine restrictions, which had the most positive effect on the market," Polina Kryuchkova, deputy economy ministry, said in the statement.
The Russian central bank has signalled its readiness to cut its key rate, now at 4.5 per cent, for the fourth time this year at its rate-setting meeting next Friday.
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