Vodka prices soar in Russia due to war



Vodka prices soar in Russia due to war

by TheTelegraph

29 comments
  1. **From The Telegraph:**

    The Kremlin is being urged to increase the [price of vodka](https://www.telegraph.co.uk/vodka/) in Russia to match war-driven inflation.

    From next year, vodka producers across the country want to see prices increase by 17 per cent to cope with a rise in tax, import costs and logistics expenses as well as a fall in the value of the rouble.

    The increase will only match the impact of inflation that has escalated [since the start of the war](https://www.telegraph.co.uk/russia-ukraine-war/).

    Veniamin Grabar, the president of the Lagoda vodka and spirits producer, told the RBK news agency: “The government is adjusting the market for inflation, as well as [changed cost prices](https://www.telegraph.co.uk/food-and-drink/features/russian-vodka-may-cards-britain-producing-best-world/) and other components that form the price of vodka.”

    After the price rise, half a litre of vodka in Russia will cost 349 roubles (£2.37) up from 299 roubles set in June.

    Vodka is a staple of Russian culture and heritage. Much like beer production in Britain, every town in Russia has a local producer.

    The [average consumption](https://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/destinations/europe/russia/articles/russians-drink-so-much-alcohol/) of vodka per person in Russia is around 17.3 shots per month, the [largest consumption](https://www.telegraph.co.uk/world-news/2023/06/18/kremlin-officials-vodka-alcohol-ukraine-russia-war-stress/) in the world.

    Maxim Chernogovsky, an analyst who tracks Russia’s illegal alcohol market, said that the price rise will increase demand for bootlegged vodka, known as “samogon”.

    “People, especially those with low incomes, are starting to look for cheaper substitutes and are switching to illegal alcohol and surrogates: samogon, ethyl alcohol-based medicines and other dangerous alcohol-containing products,” he told the Komsomolskaya Pravda newspaper.

    **Article Link:** [https://www.telegraph.co.uk/world-news/2024/10/17/vodka-prices-soar-russia-combat-war-driven-inflation/](https://www.telegraph.co.uk/world-news/2024/10/17/vodka-prices-soar-russia-combat-war-driven-inflation/)

  2. Suddenly that bag of potatoes for your husband’s death is looking pretty luxurious as far as compensation goes.   

    Arent russians also famous for drinking liquids that arent suppose to be drunk, in order to get intoxicated? 

     “The average consumption of vodka per person in Russia is around 17.3 shots per month” I dont drink, but arent shots those little tiny glasses that people tend to drink multiples of when they go out to bars? 17 sounds like not a lot for an entire month, when people drink a few of those on a night out. I would have expected more tbh. “Per person” – is this drinking-age person, or including children as well? I guess that skews the numbers a bit.

  3. Hopefully, this pushes vodka beyond the reach of the average vatnik, and they’ll have to develop a more dangerous alternative to get their fix (like they did with heroin and krokodil).

  4. No freedom of the press, fine. Needlessly invading your neighbor and killing hundreds of thousands of young soldiers for no reason, no problem. An uptick in vodka prices, “we must revolt!”.

  5. I think vodka is like heroine there. They can charge whatever and the hard-core addicted will pay

  6. Mobilitate *ALL* NATO intellugence with the sole purpose of increase the price of Vodka

    Once it reaches a level unsustainable for the average Russian income, we’ll win the war in weeks, at most, I’d bet for days

  7. I’m Ukrainian and I grew up in Moscow, my classmates started drinking at 5th grade (first school
    scandal I remember)… they were buying gin&tonic and then vomiting all around… I didn’t understand what’s the fun/point in it🤷‍♂️🤣

  8. It’s over . The worst life gets in Russia -Vodka prices go lower. If this correlation is broken so is the government’s ability to suppress its people.

  9. Well, guess that is one of Putin’s ways to reduce alcoholism rates. And also to piss off the alcoholics.

  10. There is a Russian story about the fall of the Russian Imperial Tsars after the Tsar and his family were executed and Communism had taken power:

    A telegram was received at the Kremlin fron one of the provinces. It said, “SEND MORE VODKA! THE PEOPLE ARE STARTING TO ASK WHERE THE TSAR IS!!!”

  11. Vodka has always been a type of secondary currency in that part of the world. Definitely since the USSR. and pretty sure since the time of the russian empire.

  12. Hopefully the prices of tacky track suits and filterless cigs also soar. Those are the three legs of the stool that hold up the Russian state.

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