Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    “We reject negotiations with ‘networks associated with Ilan Șor’. Igor Grosu’s reaction to Valentin Gaidarji’s call”

    6 July 2026

    Zelenski asks NATO to no longer keep the Patriot missiles in storage: “Russia will be encouraged to continue to destroy”

    6 July 2026

    “Putin’s ‘Bear’ has come ‘far too close’ to the UK’s main aircraft carrier and launched several devices into the water. What followed

    6 July 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    DISINFO.MD
    • Moldova
    • Foreign Affairs
    • Reviews
    • Analysis
    • Stopfake
    • English
      • Romanian
    DISINFO.MD
    Prima pagină » A wave of complaints and record wage debts in Russia. 2025 becomes the year of arrears.
    Foreign Affairs

    A wave of complaints and record wage debts in Russia. 2025 becomes the year of arrears.

    4 December 2025
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email VKontakte Telegram WhatsApp Copy Link
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email Copy Link

    Starting from 2025, Russian citizens have filed 26 thousand complaints to Rostrud about unpaid wages — a 1.6 times increase compared to 2024 (+11 thousand cases). These represent 37% of all electronic requests to the institution, compared to 31% last year, according to calculations made by Izvestia based on official data. In total, the number of complaints filed since the beginning of the year has exceeded 70 thousand, almost 50% more than in 2024.

    According to analyst Natalia Milceakova from Freedom Finance Global, the wave of complaints is explained by the increase in companies’ debts to employees. According to Rosstat data, outstanding wage debts have increased more than three times in a year, reaching 2.2 billion rubles (about 23 million euros) at the end of October. Just in the last month, debts have increased by 11%, and their current level (without adjustment for inflation) is the highest since August 2020, mentions economist Olga Belenkaia from Finam.

    The most debts — 36% of the total — are recorded in the construction sector. This is followed by companies in the extractive industry, with almost 25% of the total arrears, and the processing industry, with about 21%.

    “The explanation is simple: many companies in these sectors have long production cycles and often face delays in payments from partners. At the same time, interest rates are rising, and some of the money is redirected to pay off loans. Almost 78% of the entire wage debt was formed just in 2025,” explains the chief analyst from AMarkets, Igor Rastorguev.

    Details, HERE

    #arrears #citizens #complaints #Rusia #salaries
    Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email VKontakte Telegram Copy Link WhatsApp

    Related Posts

    Zelenski asks NATO to no longer keep the Patriot missiles in storage: “Russia will be encouraged to continue to destroy”

    6 July 2026

    “Putin’s ‘Bear’ has come ‘far too close’ to the UK’s main aircraft carrier and launched several devices into the water. What followed

    6 July 2026

    “There is a risk that Russia may become desperate”. How a Swedish island in the Baltic Sea is preparing for a potential invasion

    6 July 2026

    A Russian propagandist has defected from the front. He was known for promoting the mobilization of young people for the war in Ukraine

    6 July 2026

    “We reject negotiations with ‘networks associated with Ilan Șor’. Igor Grosu’s reaction to Valentin Gaidarji’s call”

    6 July 2026

    Zelenski asks NATO to no longer keep the Patriot missiles in storage: “Russia will be encouraged to continue to destroy”

    6 July 2026

    “Putin’s ‘Bear’ has come ‘far too close’ to the UK’s main aircraft carrier and launched several devices into the water. What followed

    6 July 2026

    The new leader of the Gagauz People’s Assembly calls for dialogue with Chisinau: Let’s leave the confrontation in the past

    6 July 2026

    “There is a risk that Russia may become desperate”. How a Swedish island in the Baltic Sea is preparing for a potential invasion

    6 July 2026
    DISINFO.MD
    © 2026 Disinfo. All Rights Reserved. Dezvoltat de Disinfo.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.