Russia Still Migrant Magnet Even as Wages Stay Below China’s

Russian Migrant Workers file photo

(Bloomberg – bloomberg.com – Olga Tanas – April 19, 2017)

The vast pool of labor across Russia’s porous borders is relieving strains in the labor market, helping drain the economy of inflationary pressure as it accelerates after almost two years of recession.

A steady flow of arrivals has continued even as shrinking wages and Russia’s worst currency crisis since 1998 pushed the cost of labor below the level in other major emerging economies like Brazil and China. In 2015, Russia tied Germany for second worldwide by hosting 12 million international migrants, according to a report published by the United Nations. Last year’s net increase reached more than 260,000, statistics service data show.

“If Russian wages were attractive for migrants even in 2015-2016, migration into Russia will likely continue once the Russian economy starts growing sustainably,” Sberbank CIB analysts including Anton Stroutchenevski said in a report.

Data on Tuesday showed unemployment unexpectedly declined in March to 5.4 percent, the lowest this year, from 5.6 percent a month earlier. Real wages rose 1.5 percent, less than forecast by economists surveyed by Bloomberg, while retail sales shrank on an annual basis for a record 27th month.

The labor market, stretched by an aging population and poor demographics, has absorbed millions of workers from across the former Soviet Union even as Russia’s economic boom went bust after the crash in commodity prices. With the ruble down 40 percent since mid-2014, salaries in Russia became “broadly competitive” with China’s for the first time since the tsarist era ended a century ago, according to Renaissance Capital.

A decline in the nominal exchange rate brought manufacturing wages in Russia about 30 percent to 35 percent below earnings in China in 2015-2016, central bank First Deputy Governor Ksenia Yudaeva said last week. After gains in the ruble, and assuming no changes in China, increases in Russian salaries this year will still keep them lagging behind China’s level by about 20 percent, she said.

As real wages turned positive last year after declining for 15 months, the central bank increasingly focused on the threat to inflation from higher earnings. But in its two statements after rate meetings this year, the Bank of Russia made clear the risk is no longer in sight.

In March, after cutting borrowing costs for the first time in six months, policy makers repeated a phrase already used in February, saying “the observed annual rise in real wages fosters gradual growth in consumer activity without posing an additional pro-inflationary pressure.”

Migrants now account for 5 percent to 7 percent of the labor market, according to Yaroslav Kuzminov, rector of the Higher School of Economics in Moscow. Russia’s working population averaged 76.6 million last year, unchanged from 2015.

Given the country’s demographic outlook, Russia will be relying on migrants for years to come. Over the next 15 years , the working population will shrink by about 10 million, said Alexei Kudrin, who was finance minister in 2000-2011.

“Real wage growth would have to stem from an improvement in labor productivity, as there will be more than enough labor supply to meet any increased demand,” Sberbank CIB economists said in the report. “Therefore, the labor market should not pose much of an inflationary risk.”

China, North Korea, Vietnam, Turkey and Serbia were the biggest suppliers of labor from outside the former Soviet republics in the last three months of 2016, according to the Federal Statistics Service.

With competition for workers growing more intense, Russia must stop treating “human capital similar to oxygen — something there’s a lot of and which comes at no cost,” said Kuzminov from the Higher School of Economics.

“Starting from 2020, we might see the migration factor make a negative contribution because we’ll be facing a tough rivalry for labor migrants from Asian countries,” he said. “It will become a real threat.”

©2017 Bloomberg L.P. All Rights Reserved. Article also appeared at bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-04-18/russia-still-a-migrant-magnet-even-as-wages-stay-below-china-s

[featured image is file photo]

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