Reading some western media outlets, you’d think Russia’s economic sky has fallen in as a result of sanctions imposed by NATO and the EU this year. The US driven strategy, which primarily targeted the military and finance sectors has, along with a falling oil price, devastated the rouble. The Kremlin responded by banning many western agricultural products, which has helped to create food price inflation across Russia.
However, some of the press coverage has been so ridiculously overblown that casual consumers could be fooled into thinking that starving urchins are stalking Moscow's Arbat.
From the perspective of elements in the Russian media, it’s the reverse: Europe is suffering from Moscow’s counter sanctions. The Dutch are having frenzied tomato fights in protest and Spanish farmers are as mad as hornets. Meanwhile in Moscow, locals are roasting fattened pigs in nightly defiance.
Middle ground
In such matters, the truth is usually somewhere in the middle. However, the only way to know for sure is to ask. To ignore those with vested political interests in spinning their viewpoint, and instead to query ordinary members of the public who are, blamelessly, caught in the crossfire.