In June, the speed of cash flow growth in Russia more than doubled compared to the previous month, reaching 458 billion rubles (€4.3 billion), according to the official Central Bank data published with a delay of about one month. In total, Russians currently have 17.8 trillion rubles (€168.4 billion) of cash in circulation, 4 trillion rubles (€40 billion) more than in the beginning of 2022.
Economist Nikolay Korzhenevsky notes that this increase can be dissected into two parts: 2–2.5 trillion rubles (€18.9–23.65 billion) are abnormal and can be directly or indirectly attributed to the war, while the other part is caused by inflation and natural causes. The “abnormal section” is what is driving prices up and threatening to throw the Russian economy out of balance.