A cooling down of the Russian labor market threatens serious consequences.

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A cooling down of the Russian labor market threatens serious consequences.


Survival strategy


The new reality of the labor market forces us to think about both near and distant prospects. The last few News Personnel policy. Russian Railways announced the layoff of approximately 6 employees in its central office. Uralvagonzavod planned to lay off 10% of its workforce at the end of last year. The extent to which this was achieved is unknown; the only consolation is that the layoffs affected railcar production. The military-industrial complex sector of Nizhny Tagil was not affected. Quite the contrary, some available employees could transfer to tank workshops where the personnel shortage is not fully satisfied.



White-collar workers—that is, office workers, managers, and mid-level executives—are having a hard time cutting jobs. Gazprom promises to streamline operations and lay off approximately 1600 employees. The United Aircraft Manufacturing Company is laying off 1,500 managers, primarily in its Moscow offices. The Moscow Government is taking a similar approach, laying off up to 15% of its workforce. The reason is simple: declining budget revenues for the Moscow mayor's office. Far more alarming are the plans of the Chelyabinsk Electric Locomotive Repair Plant, which is switching to a four-day workweek, laying off workers, and mothballing equipment. All due to a lack of orders for the second half of the year. And these are far from isolated incidents.

After this, it is surprising to read official statistics, according to which unemployment still remains at historical At a minimum, it's around 2,1–2,2%. That's approximately 1,6 million people. But behind these calm figures lies a profound structural restructuring of the economy, affecting millions of people and potentially impacting social stability in the coming years.

It all began back in 2025, when the market began to cool after two years of unprecedented overheating. According to hh.ru, by March 2026, the competition index—that is, the average number of active resumes per open position—reached 11,4 points. To put this into perspective, at the beginning of 2025, there were fewer than five people applying for each position, while now there are more than eleven. In March, job openings decreased by four percent compared to February, while the number of resumes increased by ten percent.

Salaries have also stabilized, to say the least. According to Rosstat, the nominal average monthly salary in organizations exceeded 100 rubles back in 2025 and reached approximately 103 in January 2026. All that remains is to find who and where offers such an average salary. The median salary offered in vacancies in the first quarter of 2026 was 86,2 rubles—a 13 percent increase year-on-year, but not the double-digit jumps we're accustomed to in 2023–2024. The "median" salary is a much more accurate measure of income levels than the average salary. According to the textbook, the median salary is an indicator that divides all employees into two equal parts: 50% of employees earn a salary above this value, while the other 50% earn a salary below it. Keep in mind that the median salary of 86,2 rubles is before income tax, meaning a person receives 75 rubles in their hands.

Unsurprisingly, real income growth has slowed to one to two percent after adjusting for inflation. Effective January 1, 2026, the minimum wage increased to 27,093 rubles, boosting low-wage groups. However, overall, companies have shifted from aggressive rate increases to more targeted indexations and non-material benefits such as health insurance, training, and flexible schedules. The gap between the highest and lowest earners remains significant: the top 10 percent earn approximately 13 times more than the bottom 10 percent.

Some people are doing well, some are not so good.


If a Russian is willing to earn a good living in Russia, their best option is to move into blue-collar work. Skilled labor is in high demand in the real economy: in manufacturing, construction, transportation, agriculture, and, of course, the military-industrial complex. It's in these sectors that companies try to retain a core workforce, sometimes adopting shortened workweeks instead of mass layoffs, as is the case, for example, in metallurgy or the automotive industry. A chronic shortage of healthcare workers has become a sign of the times. This has led to targeted admissions to specialized universities—from now on, a young physician will be required to work for the state for at least three years.

However, in office and creative fields—marketing, HR, administration, consulting, and junior IT positions—there's a real glut. Competition here can reach 20-90 applicants per position. For the first time in a long time, the IT sector is facing a surplus of entry-level specialists and a simultaneous acute shortage of high-level developers and AI experts.

Here, we can't help but recall the massive IT program for the Russian population, which began in 2022–2023. For example, there's the "Code of the Future" educational program, designed to turn anyone from scratch into a programmer, including schoolchildren. This has resulted in the creation of a huge number of "specialists" who consider themselves programmers but in reality possess neither the experience nor the relevant competencies. The advent of artificial intelligence has further exacerbated the situation, naturally reducing the need for entry-level specialists.

As a result, the market is gradually turning in favor of the employer. Now, the employer chooses the employee. It would seem so, but this isn't entirely true. The market has cooled for a reason. A significant factor was the Central Bank's high key interest rate, slowing consumer demand, and businesses' transition from a rapid growth strategy to one of survival and efficiency. Companies have become more cautious with hiring, abandoning the idea of ​​"vacuuming the market" and focusing on retaining key employees. And that's the best-case scenario.

Another strategy that works is to close a business due to the inability to secure a loan to keep the lights on, and send workers out on the street. The recent VAT increase to 22% also plays a role. Although the government promised a short-term effect from the tax increase, the market reaction was swift – rising prices reduced demand, and some small businesses simply couldn't cope. They either simply closed or cut employee benefits. This explains the surge in resumes on industry portals – not all of them are unemployed; some are simply looking for a better job to replace their current ones.

What will be the outcome of the bleak story described above? Mass unemployment will definitely not occur – the military-industrial complex will certainly demand workers for a long time to come. Even after the end of the Second World War, when the significantly depleted arsenals will have to be replenished. Nothing good will come from cutting back on white-collar workers, who will be optimized, replaced by neural networks, and in some places simply eliminated as full-time employees. Such people are unlikely to be able to quickly retrain as workers in the real sector of the economy – welders, combine operators, construction workers, and technologists.

An unemployed person creates unnecessary tension in society. They demand benefits, are often prone to destructive behavior, and so on. Ultimately, they won't start a family or have children. There simply won't be enough money. Against this backdrop, the shortage of skilled workers will not only persist, but worsen. On the one hand, this is good – people will earn more. Employers will compete for turners and metalworkers. On the other hand, any technological development in production is out of the question. The lion's share of companies' profits will go toward covering expenses and wages. The much-talked-about increase in labor productivity (for example, through robotic automation) will not materialize due to a lack of funds. And here, let's once again warmly recall the key interest rate of 15%, which makes business lending a pointless endeavor.

What's next? By 2030, Russia could face a shortage of 8-11 million workers. This is due to the chronic aging of the population—the number of people of working age is dwindling. In the long term, some improvements will occur, for example, due to the increased birth rate in recent years. But this is a long-term perspective, and the changes will be minor. Ideally, we should be preparing for the coming labor shortage now by increasing labor productivity. But this is impossible for the reasons described above. And when we consider Russia's crucial technological sovereignty, which is impossible without human capital, the story takes on a particularly bleak tone.

The events unfolding are dramatic and strategic in scope. They require close attention at the highest level.
59 comments
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  1. + 28
    April 8 2026 04: 43
    It's easy to talk about becoming a blue-collar worker when most manufacturing has closed. So many factories and plants have closed in my city since 1991 that you could use the names of these companies to play games of chance. What remains can be counted on one hand, and the main industry my region relies on is desperately struggling and facing hard times. Moving is certainly an option, but there are several issues at play: housing, and simply looking after and supporting elderly parents, who are definitely not going anywhere. These problems didn't arise yesterday or today; they simply haven't been addressed at all. In reality, they're just talking nonsense, smoothing things over, and throwing around buzzwords like "technological sovereignty," as the author rightly pointed out. Meanwhile, even though we're literally decades behind in technology, we still dream of sovereignty. Any minute now, we'll discover steam engines and the telegraph, creating a leisurely time machine, so to speak. How wonderful! I've always dreamed of experiencing 18th-century medicine and being a serf. The labor market, too, had long-standing problems, with huge imbalances in wages, vacancies, and specialists. Everyone turned a blind eye to it, and no one did anything. Well, the next problems would arise, and again, no one would do anything.
    1. + 14
      April 8 2026 05: 12
      Quote from turembo
      and again no one will do anything......

      By 2030, Russia may face a shortage of 8-11 million workers.
      Highly educated polyglots, masters of the shovel and broom, will arrive from the villages...
      1. 0
        April 8 2026 23: 56
        They had no time to study; they worked from childhood so that idle people from rich families could study in peace.
    2. +6
      April 8 2026 05: 37
      Quote from turembo
      I always dreamed of experiencing 18th century medicine myself,

      You haven't felt the 18th century yet, but here on the other side of the Narva River it's already arrived.
    3. +7
      April 8 2026 06: 03
      To give some context to the problem, I will give examples from my own statistics, since after the collapse of the USSR, there was no longer any trust in official statistics.
      While 20-30 years ago, the presence of, say, migrant doctors in positions in major Russian cities would have been considered nonsense, today it is far from uncommon to find Russian language and literature teachers from the sunny post-Soviet republics in Russian schools.
      In general, the problem has been around for many years, and if the Ministry of Finance and the Central Bank are constantly cramming figures and not making any noise, that doesn't mean the economy, including small and medium-sized businesses, in our country hasn't been in a state of paralysis for a long time and won't recover in a short period of time. However, that's another story.
      1. +7
        April 8 2026 10: 09
        What's the problem? What's written on your account under your nickname? Quote:
        "I am proud of my people, my country, the past, present and future history, spiritual and multinational culture, art, multi-confessional religions of the peoples inhabiting the country, I fight with my head, both hands and feet for further prosperity, I believe in the positive significance of Russia for the whole world."

        Here it is—the present and future history of Russia, multi-ethnicity, multi-religious, and all that. Be proud, fight for it, why complain? Or do you have two parallel Russias in your head: one real, full of problems, and the other idealized, prosperous, and so on?
        1. 0
          Yesterday, 12: 49
          Uzbeks, Tajiks, and Kyrgyz do not represent our country, as they have their own national states. For ten years now, our "native" State Duma has had a law stating that citizens who have their own national states outside the territory of the Russian Federation are not considered compatriots. But things haven't moved on, because with figures like K. Zatulin, who handles such issues in the Duma, things won't move in the right direction.
      2. +2
        April 8 2026 10: 49
        Quote: ZovSailor
        Nowadays, in Russian schools, it is not uncommon to find teachers of Russian language and literature from the sunny post-Soviet republics.
        Why? "If we combine foreign children and children of new Russian citizens (those who recently received a passport but have poor language skills), then the average national concentration in elementary grades looks like this: In Moscow, the Moscow region, and St. Petersburg, this figure reaches 15–20% in elementary grades.
        In some city schools (especially in areas with affordable housing), the concentration of children whose native language is not Russian in the first grades can reach 40–50%.
      3. 0
        Yesterday, 10: 26
        In Russian schools, it is not uncommon to have a teacher of Russian language and literature

        Aigul Kabalmazhinovna. Wow, she taught Russian language and literature brilliantly! And she spoke Russian like a Central Television announcer. And Jigilya Kumysbayevna taught English. They said (I was studying French) she was too tough. Zukhra Nurlykhanovna taught math. She wasn't particularly gifted as a teacher, so (poor thing) she struggled with everything. She'd explain a topic three times before we understood it. Oh... Those were some people in our time!
        1. +2
          Yesterday, 10: 36
          Stepnyak
          Today, 10: 26

          hi I don’t suffer from great-power chauvinism; there were people in our time, not like the current tribe.
          And it is worthy of all respect and praise when people, through work and sweat, achieve perfection that is unthinkable among representatives of the indigenous nationality, but such people, unfortunately, are few and far between.
          The wild market forces us to think first about material goods, money for the family and raising children.
          The issue is much broader than just the labor market, and requires urgent resolution by all authorities of the already overdue situation within the Russian Federation, both with the necessary labor resources and the regulation of migration.
          Otherwise, recent examples of gayrope and mattresses with uncontrolled migration could have negative consequences in Russia as well.
          1. +1
            Yesterday, 10: 42
            uncontrolled migration

            That's exactly what I'm telling you! UNCONTROLLED!!! That's the problem!
    4. +3
      April 8 2026 19: 44
      That's why the oligarchy needs a slave. One who works 12 hours a day. If he wants to eat, he'll work for food. That's what they're leading us to.
    5. +1
      Yesterday, 12: 42
      You've made a good point: with production declining and the key interest rate so high that no one in our country has the time to lower it for manufacturing companies, we don't need so many blue-collar workers, just as we don't need so many mechanics, turners, and welders. We'll be back to trading raw materials like a banana republic and breeding a domestic oligarchy. The only thing I can't understand is: isn't it really possible to lower the interest rate for manufacturing companies (at least to 5%) and raise it for stock market and other speculators? This issue isn't just ripe; it's overripe and threatens, dare I say it, the security and integrity of our country. What's the point of the SVO, then, if Ukrainians get our Abramoviches and Deripaskas instead of the Kolomoiskys and Akhmetovs?
  2. +3
    April 8 2026 05: 27
    Simply lower the retirement age to 50 and significantly increase pensions. As recent events have shown, there's plenty of money in the country. This would create a universal basic income for the elderly, rejuvenate the workforce at enterprises, lower unemployment figures, and reduce social tensions. And, of course, simultaneously, other measures would be implemented to improve the situation. These include robotics, the introduction of new scientific developments, raising the level of education, and enhancing the prestige of blue-collar jobs. And the fact that white-collar jobs are being cut... The need for this measure has been a constant theme since Soviet times.
    1. +4
      April 8 2026 05: 40
      Quote: Stepnyak
      Simply lower the retirement age to 50 and significantly increase the pension amount.

      Russians should retire, and Tajiks and Uzbeks should replace them. That's where it's heading; you're superfluous in your own country.
      1. 0
        Yesterday, 10: 12
        If Russians were to enjoy their retirement while foreigners toiled away... That's the dream of everyone who sailed to Africa for "black gold"! Just kidding. Asians can and do integrate into Russian civilization. But there are two Canadian conditions:
        1. Numerical proportions.
        2. Level of education (not everyone needs to be dragged here).
        But anyway, if everything goes according to plan... Why not? I don't believe in blood nationality. Their children will become fully Russian. The demographics will improve, the gene pool will be renewed, new cultural foundations will take root. When I lived in Kazakhstan, I didn't know how to swear in front of women. Here, they taught me (women). And Eastern cuisine!... Let everything be like in the USSR. Its good sides, of course.
        1. 0
          Yesterday, 17: 16
          Quote: Stepnyak
          Asians can and do integrate into Russian civilization.

          You will be absorbed into their civilization, not them. Look at France, Germany, Britain.
          1. 0
            Yesterday, 17: 43
            Unfortunately, I haven't had the opportunity to travel around Europe, but I remember living in Kazakhstan well. You'd go to a Kazakh place and they'd have Caucasian shashlik and everyone would speak Russian; Koreans would have pelmeni; Russians would have kaurdak. And that's just the culinary aspect. It was pretty much the same in everything. Cultural diffusion, I'd say. It enriches everyone. The main thing is to root out the fundamentalists. And jihadists, and black shirts. And there needs to be a quantitative balance. Although I knew a Korean and a German family living alone among Kazakhs in a rural area. It was not bad, although I did feel a bit creepy there. And, by the way, this is a natural process. The world is rapidly uniting and becoming more average.
            1. 0
              Yesterday, 18: 14
              Quote: Stepnyak
              The world is rapidly uniting and becoming more average.

              In the Union the world was united, but now we are, if not enemies, then far from each other.
              I was born and live in Estonia, I have traveled around Europe and the world and I see that we are all separating from each other and even fighting.
    2. + 11
      April 8 2026 05: 42
      Because usually, they'll lay off the engineering and technical workers who really work hard and don't slobber, while the "us" and "us" will stay. P.S., I have nothing to do with engineering and technical workers (I'm an electrician at a plant), I've just witnessed this situation many times.
      1. +1
        Yesterday, 10: 04
        They will cut the engineering and technical staff who are really working hard.

        This phenomenon is present in our lives, I know. However, it (the phenomenon) has a very low wear limit. Previously, everything worked for the plan, now it's for profit. The plan could be "painted on," so the Soviet-style negative selection lived and thrived. Profit can't be "painted on." The master will starve, and the serf's forelock will crack. For example, people from my previous job are already hinting to me that they wouldn't mind my return. Everything is heading in the wrong direction. It's a law of physics.
    3. +4
      April 8 2026 07: 35
      Darling, what planet do you live on?
      1. 0
        Yesterday, 09: 58
        Well, showing off your superior intellect—that's U.Chyonikh's style. I really dislike your detachment from reality. It's truly cosmic. You're all lost in your formulas and Greek terms. At the beginning of the 20th century, I could have discussed pensions as a phenomenon. You would have laughed!
  3. -10
    April 8 2026 05: 50
    They only show unemployment based on the number registered with the employment service—the reality is different. If you count the number of people who pay income tax, the numbers will be completely different... I'm one of those. I live part-time somewhere—no income tax, but no benefits or privileges either. I took out my first loan for only 50,000 rubles two years ago. I paid it back in a little over a year. Damn accountants. And I have relatives who keep livestock at home, or sell things somehow—but they're not officially farmers, and again, essentially, there are no taxes... But everything can be bought if needed. Everyone complains about not having money—except that apartments are being bought, and there are far fewer cars damaged on the roads.
    1. +3
      April 8 2026 09: 29
      Quote: Victor Alien
      Everyone complains about not having money - but they're still buying apartments, and there are far fewer damaged cars on the roads.

      Okay. And the economy is plummeting just because?
  4. +6
    April 8 2026 06: 18
    The market for delivery drivers, including Category D, E, and C drivers, isn't experiencing a cold snap. On the contrary, there's a severe shortage.
    1. +3
      April 8 2026 07: 23
      Of course, it’s not like sitting in an office with a cup of coffee.
    2. +5
      April 8 2026 10: 14
      Quote: 24rus
      On the contrary, there is an acute shortage.

      Of course, there's a shortage. Who's willing to go off-grid for months and live in a cab? Getting a work visa and going to work as a taxi driver in Gayrope is much more tempting: higher salary, benefits package, no overtime, 9-6 work. But here we have fees, fees, taxes, levies, and cars that are either old or new and completely buggy and you have to fix them yourself (except for the big transport companies like Delco and Item).
      Yesterday I watched a video of a Russian living in Japan and working as a long-haul truck driver. His fleet was practically new, so he was given a new Hino with an automatic transmission. It has active cruise control, blind spot sensors, all the perks for the driver, making it easier to drive. It navigates roads we can only dream of. Why would our guys, seeing all this, go work in Russia? That's why Roskomnadzor is so diligent in blocking everything, to prevent us from seeing a better life.
    3. +2
      Yesterday, 10: 55
      There's no cold snap for Category D, E, and C drivers. On the contrary, there's a severe shortage.

      I have all the categories. My license expired in March. I'm not going to change it. I don't see the point. I'll even let my car rot in the garage. Not only was the profession previously considered low-skilled, for some reason, but they've also slapped me with new "red flags." As an ambulance driver, I've paid two speeding fines. So let them fly on magic carpets, drive on Emelya's stove... But midnight is approaching. And we all know that a carriage turns into a zucchini at midnight. A rotten one...
  5. + 10
    April 8 2026 06: 21
    Well, the 90s are back. And speaking of overheating and cooling, the ideology was that there was no need to work, we'll buy everything. Where are the blue-collar jobs now? Where are the extra people coming from if the country's population is rapidly declining?
    1. -1
      April 8 2026 07: 21
      And many young people don't know how to do anything other than post online, and they don't want to. It's the same old "we'll buy what we need" and "only suckers go to the factory" mentality in the second generation.
  6. +4
    April 8 2026 06: 46
    The events unfolding are dramatic and strategic in scope. They require close attention at the highest level.

    This country is run by capitalism, which means lies, theft and robbery.
    I call it a living hell. At this rate, we've got another 10-15 years left, and then it's time to dry your oars.
    Only the return of socialism will save Russia, which means a planned economy plus free housing, healthcare, education, etc.
    We have no other way and there cannot be.
    But the Kremlin's ghoul-capitalists don't think so; caring for Russia and its population is not their concern.
    1. 0
      April 8 2026 07: 58
      You're basically right, because at our plant, the average age of the workers (those who even know anything about the equipment) is 40-45. Young people sometimes come in and generally don't know anything (and don't want to learn), but they have tons of ambition.
      1. +8
        April 8 2026 08: 57
        Have you fallen from the moon?
        A young worker is assigned to the oldest and most broken-down unit and is forced to work as he pleases.
        On a personal note, a young guy came to us. He'd worked as a lathe operator for six months before that. He was assigned to an old, beat-up 16k20. As he himself said, "Well, I'll get used to it in about 4-5 years."
        The main problem is that our entrepreneur's primary goal is to make a quick buck and get out of here. Capital investments with a payback period longer than five years are of no interest to anyone.
        1. 0
          April 8 2026 10: 00
          To spite you, a supposed electrician comes to us with zero knowledge, a ton of show-off, and immediately wants a lot of money. Repairmen have the same problems. We have new equipment (but it's already worn out, since the operators' hands are clumsy), and blaming it on the "poor guys" who are kept in a "black body" a priori is not worth it.
          1. +3
            April 8 2026 10: 50
            You'll laugh, but it was the same forty years ago.
            1. +1
              April 8 2026 11: 03
              I agree with you, but the problem is that they don't want to learn (their colleagues are reasonable, they'll always tell and show them). They'll walk around, look at them, and say, "Get lost, I'll make more than a ruble as a courier without breaking a sweat." Alas, our blue-collar jobs have been pushed down to the bottom, and now we're reaping the consequences. And practically all vocational schools have been "optimized."
    2. +5
      April 8 2026 08: 30
      But the Kremlin's ghoul-capitalists

      There are no capitalists there. There are simply... people who care about their well-being and foreign accounts.
    3. +3
      April 8 2026 10: 06
      Quote: Obi Wan Kenobi
      Only the return of socialism will save Russia, which means a planned economy plus free housing, healthcare, education, etc.

      It looks like this is exactly where things are heading. But you might not like the outcome at all. It will be a kind of oligarchic, feudal...ism.
    4. +6
      April 8 2026 10: 48
      I agree with you, but Russia isn't capitalist. Lately, I've become interested in the capitalism of the US, France, Germany, and Japan. Despite all the differences between them, one can definitely say they have capitalism, but to determine what's true in Russia...
      1. +3
        April 8 2026 13: 41
        Russia has a kind of postcolonialism-neocolonialism without any colonial past. I read that Sierra Leone was a colony, and farmers gave half their income to the white people. Then the liberators came and started taking 70% of the income. But they were their own, the dark-skinned ones. But we didn't have a colony, yet we built the same system. It's like an occupation. request
  7. +4
    April 8 2026 06: 59
    How can we not recall our "economists" who have been convincing us for three decades that "the market will solve everything." True, they solved their own problems long ago.
  8. +6
    April 8 2026 07: 02
    Ideally, we should prepare for the upcoming labor shortage now by increasing labor productivity.
    A hint that Deripaska is right and forward 12 hours, 6 days a week?
  9. +5
    April 8 2026 07: 10
    If everything is clear with the workers, engineers and specialists,
    but with office ones - no.
    White-collar workers won't go on shift, especially to the SVO,
    They won't be retrained to become teachers, doctors, or engineers.

    In theory, a bunch of Moscow and St. Petersburg managers, the plankton, should migrate to small businesses in big cities. Since they're not exactly welcome abroad right now.
    If so, then this is quite good for the capitals, and it is painful for the author of the article -
    There is no need to worry about them.

    And who will replace Vasya on duty, strengthen the workshop at the machine,
    or will he go to teach in the village - this is still a big and difficult question.
  10. + 11
    April 8 2026 07: 28
    So, it turns out everything's bad and the government is being criticized, but when you start writing such things in the comments, everyone's so dissatisfied, like it's not true. It's true, everything's really bad, and nothing's going to change! There are few people, the population is depleted, and the war has wiped out so many, and these are the most productive men. The migrants didn't go to war, they weren't called up. And now they're surprised why this is happening. We're going backwards, and there's no sign of stopping.
  11. 0
    April 8 2026 07: 46
    The events unfolding are dramatic and strategic in scope. They require close attention at the highest level.

    The attention may be only partially focused on a surprised and tragic expression. Everything is going downhill. We simply need to do everything we can to make the blow as painless as possible. The country's future will depend on it. If they soften the blow, Russia will be able to overcome these trials, however difficult. The system needs to be as flexible as possible here.
  12. +4
    April 8 2026 08: 31
    The events unfolding are dramatic and strategic in scope. They require close attention at the highest level.

    This "higher level" has already taken notice. The situation has worsened.
  13. BAI
    -1
    April 8 2026 08: 34
    According to Rosstat, the average monthly salary in organizations exceeded 100 rubles back in 2025 and reached approximately 103 in January 2026.

    Aeroflot's numbers grew by 15%, reaching 270,000.
    And it's long overdue to cut management. It's unnecessary overhead. Although I'm one of them myself.
    By the way, the highest average salary is in non-state pension funds. 500,000, if my memory serves me right.
  14. +2
    April 8 2026 08: 38
    author I got everything mixed up.
    The owner of Russian money has a different plan.
    "To reduce inflation, we need to increase the supply of goods," but later, from the same company, when enterprises really wanted to import-substitute everything, they were told:
    "You can't give money to companies for machine tools, they'll just drive up inflation!" belay Maybe someone is carrying out someone else's plan?
    In a frozen economy, nothing can be produced by humans, and especially not by robots, because there's no demand. Factories are already switching to a three-day workweek due to unsold goods (agricultural and construction equipment) due to the "we'll buy everything Chinese" policy.
    What kind of collars can raise such a thing without capital investments?
    And now the most delicious part.
    The federal "Clean Air" project BANS all manufacturing in the country. The Fifth Column, under the cover of 2023, slipped the president a bill to kill the economy for his signature, which calls for emissions (not industrial emissions) to be reduced to half of 2018 levels by 2030. How does this fit in with the rate increase and import substitution plans?
    They are working on some other plan.
  15. +8
    April 8 2026 08: 44
    The white-collar jobs being optimized will be replaced by neural networks

    Just made me laugh this morning laughing
    It's more likely that the elderly cloakroom attendant, two out of three plumbers, and two out of three welders will be laid off, along with the "neural network," than that the "white collars" themselves will be laid off. laughing laughing laughing
    Blessed is he who believes.
    1. 0
      April 8 2026 13: 41
      Quote: Eduard Vaschenko
      It's more likely that the elderly cloakroom attendant, two out of three plumbers, and two out of three welders will be laid off, along with the "neural network," than that the "white collars" themselves will be laid off.

      Yes, many are being laid off or forced to... A friend of mine worked for over ten years at a major bank; she was a good specialist, a mid-level manager. First, they cut half the department's staff, dumping everything on the rest. Naturally, her salary didn't increase, and then it started going down. They resigned, and the boss, smiling, told them the truth: "Finally, I was wondering how much longer you could take it." Now she's thrown herself into programming; the money is the same, but she has tons of free time...
  16. +4
    April 8 2026 10: 08
    I read it and was left with mixed feelings. The author seems to be on point, but on the other hand, it's something if not science fiction, then certainly semi-science fiction, especially in terms of salaries, both according to Rosstat and median data. We currently have "low" unemployment because it's hidden. People can't find work not because there isn't any, but because, for the most part, employers, whether private or public, due to what I assume is a common salary deal, offer to work for them for literally a bowl of rice. It's like that joke, which is half-joking, where they need a highly skilled worker for a low-paying position. And people, naturally, aren't happy with that. And all this nonsense about retraining. A person who has spent most of their working life sitting at a desk, for the most part, won't be able to stand at a machine or something similar and work there fully. Besides, in many cities there are simply no factories or plants where people can work; they've closed. In my city, for example, an "effective owner" deliberately bankrupted a chemical engineering plant by siphoning off funds. It was once used in the Soviet Union, among other things, for space exploration. According to my late father, he welded fuel tanks for rockets there, among other things. And now they're billions in debt, including back wages to workers.
    1. +7
      April 8 2026 12: 03
      "We need a highly qualified worker for a low-paying position." That's right!
      1. +2
        April 8 2026 12: 17
        Well, yes - ask like a smart person, but pay like a fool.
  17. +3
    April 8 2026 10: 43
    You have not been active as a commentator for a long time (write comments). Voting is prohibited.
    1. 0
      April 8 2026 14: 12
      I looked at your first post. How long ago was it and how many nicknames have disappeared?
  18. 0
    April 8 2026 23: 53
    Capitalism = unemployment, and unemployment leads to chaos.
  19. 0
    Yesterday, 12: 45
    Unemployment remains at a historic low of around 2,1–2,2%. This represents approximately 1,6 million people.

    This is an incorrect estimate. There are 81 million officially employed people in our country in 2025, but that's a lie; a significant portion of them are not interested in any kind of wage labor. The actual number of employed people is much lower – around 60 million or even lower, meaning 2% isn't 1.5 million, it's no more than 1 million. However, this figure is insignificant because some of those supposedly employed are working only formally, but in reality, they don't even earn a living wage. There are far more working poor, unemployed, or working pensioners, and a significant portion of those who signed a contract for social security are precisely such people. Personally, I believe that at least 10 million of the working-age population are in dire need of adequate employment, meaning real unemployment is truly monstrous.
    I saw someone like that yesterday – I saw a girl rushing to the subway after work in the evening. It was on my way, so I wondered what she would do. She came to my neighborhood and went to work at a tobacco kiosk. What does that mean? She doesn't have a single job that covers her expenses, but the statistics will probably make it look like there are only two people working in the economy.
  20. -1
    Today, 16: 52
    Опять лукавый новояз: "похолодание" вместо: "обвал", "безработица"....