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Russia\\\'s central bank forecasts 2014 growth below 1.0pc

Thursday, 3 April 2014


MOSCOW, Apr 2 (AFP): Russia's Central Bank chief warned on Wednesday that economic growth was likely to slow to less than one per cent in 2014, lowering its previous forecast.
"Currently we believe that realising our prognosis on growth in 2014 that we presented last year is hardly probable," Central Bank chief Elvira Nabiullina said, Russian agencies reported.
"We thought that growth would be between 1.5 per cent and 1.8 per cent, but now it is more likely that growth will slow to less than 1 per cent," she said.
Nabiullina had still predicted growth of between 1.5 per cent to 1.8 in mid-February this year shortly before Russia sent troops into Crimea.
Russian economy, already staggering due to a weakened rouble and falling foreign investment, has been damaged further by Moscow's annexation of the peninsula, which resulted in targeted Western sanctions and stock market's slump by 6.0 per cent in March.
Economy minister Alexei Ulyukayev said late last month that Russia could see growth of just 0.6 per cent this year with capital flight reaching $100 billion.
Former finance minister Alexei Kudrin this month offered an even more dire prognosis of growth "around zero", calling it the price of an "independent foreign policy."