Russia's GDP declined 3.6% in the third quarter, a major improvement from the 8% drop in the second quarter. Analysts believe this is due in part to the lifting of coronavirus-related restrictions. If this trend continues, Russia's official estimates of a 3.8% GDP contraction for the year may be validated. However, if the second wave of the pandemic worsens, then official predictions–and plans– may be overturned.
In response to a resurgence of COVID-19 within the city, Moscow officials have imposed a spate of new regulations, including requiring restaurants to move 30% of their employees to remote work. The article tracks the unclear boundaries and uneven enforcement of this new regulation, which stands to impact small business and the direct service industry the most.
This article details the struggles of Russian citizens and hospitals in procuring COVID-19 treatments during the spring of 2020. As a second wave of COVID-19 appears on the horizon, these struggles implicate issues to be aware of in planning for and projecting the severity of the wave.
Coronavirus clinics in Moscow and Russia as a whole run out of beds for patients in the midst of a second wave of COVID-19. In response, Russia has started imposing new restrictions to prevent further infection