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Putin criticizes Russia's top officials over economic contraction

On Wednesday, Russian President Vladimir Putin scolded top officials after the economy shrank by 1.8% during the first two months of the year. He asked them to 'come up with new measures that will boost the economic growth.

The tight monetary policies of the central bank and Western sanctions that target the oil revenues of the country are the main reasons for the slowdown in Russian growth.

The International Monetary Fund has raised its estimate of Russia's GDP growth in 2026 from 0.8% to 1.1% after the Middle East crisis spiked oil prices in March.

The government has forecast growth of 1.3% for this year, but warned it could revise that figure lower later this month because of the lacklustre performance of the economy at the beginning of the year.

Putin said that calendar factors alone were not enough to explain the contraction, telling his top economic officials including Maxim Oreshkin and Elvira Nabibullina of the central bank, as well as Finance Minister Anton Siluanov.

"I would like to know why macroeconomic indicators are falling short," Putin said. He added that they were even falling short of officials' forecasts.

Putin said he was expecting proposals for "additional?measures aimed at revitalizing growth," that would promote 'business initiatives and redirect skillful labour into sectors with greater growth potential.

Putin stated that the government has?also prepared?a set of measures to reduce state?budget dependency on volatile global commodity market revenues, but did not provide any details. (Reporting and writing by Vladimir Soldatkin, Gleb Bryanski and Dmitry Antonov; Editing by PhilippaFletcher).

(source: Reuters)