Physical Address

304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124

Meeting of State Council Presidium on export development

President of Russia Vladimir Putin: Good afternoon, colleagues,
We have a very important topic for today’s
meeting of the State Council Presidium, and we will discuss it with the heads
of Russian regions, senior Government officials, ministers and heads of various
agencies. It matters a great deal for our regions, cities and entire sectors of the Russian economy. I am referring to the steps we must take to expand our
national export potential.
You all know that Russia has been active in its
foreign trade operations. Russian businesses have been facing objective
challenges. Nevertheless, we have been expanding our foreign business ties and broadening
our geographic reach by strengthening our cooperation with predictable and reliable partners who, just like Russia, pursue their national interests and appreciate mutually beneficial relations in trade, manufacturing and cooperation.
Let me note the radical changes that global trade and the global economy in general
are going through. We have discussed this quite a few times already, and everyone is aware of these developments and understands them. We are witnessing
the emergence of a new system of relations with the countries of the so-called
Global South increasingly playing a leading role within this framework. These
are emerging economies, and they are part of promising integration structures
like BRICS.
The share of BRICS countries in global GDP has
already exceeded the same indicator for the G7, and counting. This trend is
gaining traction and will continue. Just for reference, and I myself was
curious to discover these statistics, here is what the G7 represented back in 1992 – its countries accounted for 45.5 percent of global GDP. However, in 2022, its share was down to 30.5 percent. Therefore, its share declined from
45.5 percent to 30 percent and is expected to be 27.9 percent in 2028.
But what about the BRICS countries? BRICS,
without taking into consideration its newcomers, accounted for 16.7 percent of global
GDP in 1992, but in 2022 this share reached 31.4 percent, and is expected to reach
33.8 percent in 2028. This trend is real and it will not go away. It is an objective process that has nothing to do with any momentary considerations or even conflicts, including the one we all have on our minds. Once we include the new BRICS participants, this changes everything, bringing the 2028 forecast to 38 percent of global GDP.
This means that we are witnessing the emergence
of forward-looking markets based on solid, strategic partnerships and the notion of integrating economic capabilities and promoting mutually reinforcing
growth.
It is important not only to understand
these trends but also to enjoy the advantages and export opportunities that are
emerging for our businesses and enterprises. It is necessary to assist them at all levels.
As you know, a six-year national
project to support exports will be completed this year. During this period, we
have established tools, including those in the Russian Federation constituent
entities, that help our companies supply products abroad. These tools allowed
them to cope with the pandemic phase and to reroute commodity flows to promising growing markets.
During our meetings with
representatives of the business community, it was repeatedly suggested that the national project to support export be extended, and we agreed that this would
be done.
Next year, we are launching an upgraded national project called International Cooperation and Exports. The export
performances, the economic development priorities facing our country and, of course, the objective global trends I have just mentioned should serve as the foundation for its decisions, solutions, measures and mechanisms.
In this connection, I would like to note that it is necessary to facilitate more efficient financial and information support for export operations in order to ensure the confident, long-term
development of foreign economic ties. It is also essential to actively
establish the logistics and transport infrastructure, as well as production
cooperation platforms.
At the same time, it is highly
important that we incentivise Russian companies to enter markets offering value-added goods and to expand non-resource
non-energy exports, including deliveries of goods from the machine-building
sector, food and so on.
I would like to note that, in 2021–2023, Russia increased its non-resource non-energy exports more than four-fold. Four-fold, not
just a few percent, is a commendable result, the growth from US$36 billion to US$148
billion. Of course, this is not the limit for us; in reality, this volume is
not that high.
In the first seven months of 2024,
non-resource non-energy exports continued to grow, gaining five percent and reaching
US$89.8 billion.
Russia already ranks among the leading
global exporters in certain sectors, including food deliveries. Of course, this
result has been primarily facilitated by specialists and staffs of enterprises,
as well as development institutions, regional leaders and federal agencies
supporting them.
In my Address to the Federal Assembly, and later in the Executive Order on national development goals, I set a benchmark.
By 2030, non-resource non-energy exports must increase by at least two thirds
compared to 2023. This is an ambitious objective, especially considering the challenges our companies have been facing lately.
The first challenge concerns carrying out
settlements. Of course, we all know everything there is to know about this.
Western elites have taken outrageously hostile actions targeting Russian
financial institutions and payment systems making it harder for them to receive
payments for the exports and to pay for imported goods.
To a certain extent, we have succeeded in overcoming this issue. Last year, the share of transactions involving Russian
exports denominated in the so-called toxic Western currencies decreased by a factor of two, while the share of ruble-denominated transactions in our foreign
trade operations is approaching 40 percent. Between 2021 and 2023, the share of export-related settlements in rubles almost tripled, reaching 39 percent, while
the share of ruble-denominated import transactions increased by another two
percent, reaching a total of 30 percent.
We continue moving in this direction and have
been working with our colleagues abroad to make wider use of our national
currencies and to process transactions by relying on payment clearing systems,
platforms, and so on.
It is obvious that we need time to deliver on these objectives, since our leading trade partners are deeply integrated into
the existing international financial system.
That said, the whole world is currently working
on building the so-called supra-national payment infrastructure. Let me
emphasise that there are many countries and regions around the world who have
been working hard on these matters to be able to use digital currencies issued
by their central banks and digital financial assets. This would offer a permanent
and reliable solution operating independently of third countries. Let me stress
that others are also moving in this direction, and we are not the only ones
doing so in connection with the developments we all know. This is happening
around the world and has become mainstream for many regions, including the Middle East and Asia. Everyone is thinking about it and coming up with various
solutions.
The second point I wanted to raise concerns the growing transshipment, shipment and insurance costs, as well as other expenses
for our exporters. This has a direct bearing on the price of goods made in Russia
and therefore affects their competitiveness in the global market.
We must certainly make efforts to remove
logistical barriers to Russian exports and to ensure transport connectivity, so
to speak, from the first to the last kilometre, particularly with the promising
markets in the Global South, Africa and Latin America – in fact, these have
always been our primary markets for our products.
To this end, new routes and international
transport corridors are being developed, such as the North-South corridor, as well as the Azov-Black Sea and Eastern corridors, and the Northern Sea Route.
At the same time, I would like to emphasise
once again that the opening of new transport infrastructure should be aligned
with other development projects such as warehouses, cargo handling terminals,
and so on, and that the construction deadlines should be in line with plans to increase exports to friendly countries and expand into new, fast-growing
markets.
In this connection, this is the third point I wanted
to make. We are making active progress within the EAEU and expanding free trade
zones with our foreign partners.
At the same time, many countries today maintain
a high level of protective tariffs. Despite some progress, our companies still face
challenges with finding buyers, organising business negotiations and obtaining
marketing information in those countries.
Additionally, not all our partners have
mechanisms in place for protecting Russian investors’ rights and capital abroad.
All these important issues are being addressed
by the Government, the Russian Export Centre, our trade missions abroad and certainly by Russian regions.
Furthermore, it must be acknowledged that global
awareness of finished goods from Russia, including high-tech products, is
actually quite limited. At the same time, our manufacturers are ready to supply
a much wider range of high-quality, competitive and environmentally friendly
products.
It is important to promote these products responsibly
and professionally, so that as many potential buyers as possible become aware
of them. This should be done both online and offline – on the ground, as they
say, and through digital channels and trading platforms.
The Russian Export Centre has a special programme,
Made in Russia, which helps foster a positive image of Russia and Russian brands
abroad. We need to scale up this practice and expand it to more regions. I ask
the Government and the REC to prepare a joint action plan to this end.
I would like to add that Russian goods,
primarily manufactured goods and goods with high added value, should not only
be recognisable, but also accessible to foreign buyers.
To be continued.

en_USEnglish