How is that at all relevant given that Russia doesn’t trade in dollars though? Also, as a follow up question, do you think having a weak currency hurts or helps when you’re a major commodity exporter?
The reality is that Russians are not actually affected by this because pretty much nobody in Russia holds western currencies, and the domestic economy is largely self sufficient. The only context this matters in is trade, and Russia is a major exporter, which means that domestic revenue for the government goes up when rouble is weak. Hence why rouble gets intentionally depressed pretty much every years, and people always get really excited about it.
They just state inflation would be an outcome without actually explaining how that would happen. It’s pretty clear these people are just parroting things without understanding them.
How is that at all relevant given that Russia doesn’t trade in dollars though? Also, as a follow up question, do you think having a weak currency hurts or helps when you’re a major commodity exporter?
You tell me, you’re the one comparing them.
I’m simply pointing out the idiocy here https://lemmy.ml/post/23076839
The reality is that Russians are not actually affected by this because pretty much nobody in Russia holds western currencies, and the domestic economy is largely self sufficient. The only context this matters in is trade, and Russia is a major exporter, which means that domestic revenue for the government goes up when rouble is weak. Hence why rouble gets intentionally depressed pretty much every years, and people always get really excited about it.
Most, as you put it, “experts” point to inflation as a consequence, but I know shit about economics and don’t know the mechanism behind it.
https://www.newsweek.com/what-does-rubles-sharp-fall-mean-russias-economy-1992933
They just state inflation would be an outcome without actually explaining how that would happen. It’s pretty clear these people are just parroting things without understanding them.