Russia’s Small Businesses Pay the Price of Spiraling Ukraine War

Closed shops and “for rent” signs in a Moscow suburb show pressure on Russia’s small businesses as war spending, inflation, and higher taxes rise. Owners say fewer customers and higher costs are forcing them to cut back, go informal, or shut down completely.

Kyiv Post
75
4 min read
0 views
Russia’s Small Businesses Pay the Price of Spiraling Ukraine War

In a Moscow suburb, shut-down shops and “for rent” signs reveal the creeping toll of Russia’s slowing wartime economy.

Amid huge outlays on its war in Ukraine, tax rises, stubborn inflation and nervy consumers are all weighing on Russia’s small companies.

JOIN US ON TELEGRAM

Follow our coverage of the war on the @Kyivpost_official.

“My business is on its last legs. I’m thinking about shutting down completely,” the owner of a pharmacy in Mytishchi, on the northeastern outskirts of the Russian capital, told AFP.

In business for 12 years, she spoke anonymously, citing security concerns as she criticized the government’s decision to raise taxes and regulations that are squeezing profits.

“As soon as the military action in Ukraine began, we started to feel inflation,” she said.

Rising prices and a volatile currency have been among the major domestic economic fallouts of Moscow’s four-year offensive on Ukraine, which has seen it hit with unprecedented packages of Western sanctions.

The billions of dollars being spent on the war every month had initially helped shield the Russian economy from the negative fallouts of the campaign.

Military spending has surged to around eight percent of GDP -- the highest level since the Cold War.

But the civilian economy has been left behind.

Russia posted its first quarterly economic decline for three years at the start of 2026.

For small businesses in the commuter town of Mytishchi, the slowdown has come on top of fierce competition from online retailers and tighter rules on alcohol sales, the main money-maker for small restaurants and neighborhood food stores.

Other Topics of Interest

ISW Russian Offensive Campaign Assessment, June 29, 2026

War in Ukraine - Latest update, key takeaways and map from the Institute for the Study of War on June 29, 2026

‘Most precarious’

“The Russian economy is a two-tier economy -- the state dominated defense industry, doing pretty well, and basically everything else,” London-based expert on the Russian economy Alexander Kolyandr told AFP.

In the new system, Russian shoppers, in general, are not feeling as flush as a few years ago.

“They postponed big ticket purchases,” he said.

“They are not so well off as they were off in the earlier part of the war.”

All of which is heaping pressure on professionals and entrepreneurs -- those not benefiting from the spending on the war who are “suffering the most”, Kolyandr said.

“Their position is the most precarious.”

In Mytishchi, manicure salon owner Zhanna has recently had to move into a shared studio, unable to afford the rent on her own premises.

“Overall I can see a decrease in the flow of clients due to the unstable financial situation,” she told AFP.

“All types of costs have gone up, and clients are choosing more budget-friendly beauty procedures, or not having them at all.”

Like many, she also complained that a string of tax hikes and changes -- raising VAT and removing a simplified low-rate system for the smallest firms -- had made the situation even worse.

Facing such constraints, she is mulling shifting part of her income into the shadows.

“It’s not possible to work completely by the book. Therefore I’m looking for a balance where my services can stay affordable, and I still have something left.”

‘Finish us off’

“Store closed”, reads the sign next to Alina’s butcher shop.

It used to sell groceries, but the owner is now looking for new tenants.

“In recent years it’s become harder, because purchasing power has dropped significantly,” said the 49-year-old, who owns the business with her husband.

Her clients are tightening their belts, and her tax bill, she estimates, has jumped 15-fold under the new rules, introduced this year.

“We’ve been working since 2015 and we pay our taxes honestly. We pay for all the other new requirements. And now they’ve decided to finish us off for good,” she said.

“What is an honest entrepreneur supposed to do in this situation? Shut down?”

Original Source

Kyiv Post

Share this article

Related Articles

Poland refuses to hand over MiG-29 jets to Ukraine, defense minister says
🇺🇦🇷🇺Ukraine vs Russia
Meduza

Poland refuses to hand over MiG-29 jets to Ukraine, defense minister says

Poland refused to hand over MiG-29 fighter jets to Ukraine after Kyiv failed to share its drone technology with Warsaw, Polish Defense Minister Władysław Kosiniak-Kamysz said.

il y a environ 3 heures2 min
FM Sybiha meets South Korean foreign minister to discuss Russia–North Korea cooperation
🇺🇦🇷🇺Ukraine vs Russia
Ukrinform

FM Sybiha meets South Korean foreign minister to discuss Russia–North Korea cooperation

The foreign ministers of Ukraine and the Republic of Korea, Andrii Sybiha and Cho Hyun, discussed in Seoul the common challenges posed by Moscow’s cooperation with Pyongyang and the issue of North Korean prisoners of war.

il y a environ 3 heures2 min
Parcel bomb injures Ukrainian oligarch and family in Monaco - reports
🇺🇦🇷🇺Ukraine vs Russia
BBC News - Europe

Parcel bomb injures Ukrainian oligarch and family in Monaco - reports

The blast was caused by an explosive device which appeared to contain bolts and pellets, the head of Monaco's government said.

il y a environ 3 heures1 min
Russian drone strikes hit educational institution and business in Poltava region, sparking fire
🇺🇦🇷🇺Ukraine vs Russia
Ukrinform

Russian drone strikes hit educational institution and business in Poltava region, sparking fire

Russian troops have attacked the Poltava region several times, damaging an educational institution.

il y a environ 3 heures1 min