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The Minister of #Economic Development Maxim #Reshetnikov lamented the strangely low unemployment in #Russia as foreshadowing future economic trouble. To translate his bureaucratic message simply, companies across many industries are facing staffing shortages. The problem even before the war, but previously imports could fill the gaps. However, workers are still lacking, and new hires won't come. There are several reasons for this.
First, many skilled professionals just left due to unrest—why bother with all the challenges. Others hesitate to build careers at large firms due to the military draft risk hanging over employers and employees alike. If requested, employers must hand employees over to recruiters or face fines. As a result, many talented people now work freelance or off-the-grid.
While #Putin talks of exemptions for IT workers as if other roles aren't crucial, no one wants to bet their future or prove exceptional worth for an out. Words from the state now mean little after two decades of empty patriotic claims. As long as the nation remains embroiled in a senseless #war, prioritizing military policy over economic and social well-being, conditions will not improve—they'll likely deteriorate further.
We must address this reality directly, rather than wrapping discussions of "anomalously low unemployment" in unnecessary technical jargon that fails to diagnose true root causes. The path forward demands honesty and compassion over obstruction and obfuscation.