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Russia’s grim gain: Fallen soldiers boost Putin’s economy

Russia’s grim gain: Fallen soldiers boost Putin’s economy

A recent article argues that the mounting casualties suffered by Russian forces in Ukraine are somehow boosting Russia’s economy by reducing its workforce burden and stimulating a war-driven economy. Key to that claim: vast numbers of soldiers killed or incapacitated, plus heavy government spending on contracts and military production.

Yet a growing body of economic analysis paints a starkly different and much bleaker picture. While military expenditure and arms-industry output have surged, the benefits are shallow, short-term, and come at high social and economic cost.

Military expenditure, but shrinking civilian economy

In 2024–2025 alone, payments to soldiers including enlistment bonuses, salaries, and death/injury payouts — amounted to roughly 1.5% of Russia’s GDP. That’s a tremendous drain on public finances.

State-directed spending has shifted heavily toward defence and away from civilian welfare: pensions, social programs and non-military public investments have been squeezed.

Civilian industries — mining, energy, many manufacturing sectors are shrinking or stagnating. War-related demand masks the underlying collapse of much of the peacetime economy.

Demographic collapse long-term drag on labour force & productivity

The human cost of war is enormous: Russia reportedly lost nearly 430,000 soldiers in 2024 alone, with total casualties (killed and wounded) over 1 million since 2022.

Such losses concentrated among working-age men erode the labour force, reduce long-term productivity, shrink the tax base, and undermine generational growth potential.

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