The data from S&P Global shows a reversal from the PMI of 50.2 in May to 47.5 last June, as the country struggles to cope under the strain of war. S&P Global wrote: "The Russian manufacturing sector signalled a renewed deterioration in operating conditions during June.” It is understood that the downturn is as a result of weak client demand and a stronger ruble which increases the cost of Russian exports.
But some fear that the country’s coping mechanisms are not sustainable in the long-term.
Alexander Kolyandr, a senior fellow at the Center for European Policy Analysis, said last month that the fueling of the nation’s wartime economy “was growth on budgetary amphetamines."
The first quarter of this year has seen Russia’s GDP grow by just 1.4%, significantly less than the 4.5% growth it saw in the final quarter of last year.
Kolyandr added: "Whether it's a managed slowdown or a severe drop, we still don't know.
“Nevertheless, we see the economy slowing down."
Putin has centred his country's economy around the war effort (Image: Getty)
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