New budget projections for Russia reveal a significant and growing fiscal reliance on its agricultural sector. According to figures from the upcoming three-year budget plan, federal revenues from grain export duties are expected to surge to 135.82 billion rubles in 2026, a near-doubling from the 76.43 billion rubles anticipated in 2025. This upward trajectory is forecast to continue, reaching 152.37 billion rubles in 2027 and 158.57 billion rubles in 2028.
The tax burden is not limited to grains. Duties on oilseeds and vegetable oils are also projected to rise sharply, from 44.84 billion rubles in 2025 to 62.98 billion rubles in 2026, before moderating in the following years. These revenues are generated by Russia’s complex “damper” system, a flexible export levy designed to control domestic food inflation. For key grains like wheat, corn, and barley, the duty is calculated weekly at 70% of the difference between the current export price and a government-set base price. A separate, even steeper regime exists for sunflower seeds, which are subject to a 50% duty or a minimum of 32,000 rubles per tonne, alongside floating duties on sunflower oil and meal.
This mechanism effectively caps the revenue farmers can earn from high global prices, transferring a substantial portion of the premium to the state. The government’s high revenue expectations for the coming years are a clear indicator that it anticipates continued strong global demand and prices, but also that it intends to capture a significant share of that value for its own coffers. This policy creates a challenging environment for producers, as noted by agricultural economists; while the state argues the funds are partially recycled as subsidies, the system inherently limits farmers’ ability to fully capitalize on favorable international market conditions and reinvest in their operations.
The projected surge in export duty revenues underscores the Russian government’s long-term strategy of using the agricultural sector as both an economic engine and a tool for social and political stability through controlled domestic prices. For farmers and agribusinesses, these figures are a stark reminder that their profitability is intrinsically linked to, and constrained by, state fiscal policy. While the system may provide some subsidy support and stabilize the domestic market, it ultimately places a ceiling on farm-gate income and could potentially dampen investment in the very production growth that drives these export revenues.
Error


