Russian finance ministry proposes VAT hike to fund war in Ukraine

VAT will rise from 20% to 22% in 2026 to help fund military spending in the fifth year of Ukraine war

People walk in front of St. Basil's Cathedral and Spasskaya Tower in Red Square in Moscow, Russia July 25, 2025. Photo: Reuters

Russia's finance ministry proposed raising the rate of value-added tax on Wednesday to 22% from 20% in 2026 to fund military spending in what would be the fifth year of the war in Ukraine.

The proposal comes as US President Donald Trump called Russia a ''paper tiger'' for "fighting aimlessly for three and a half years" and said that President Vladimir Putin and Russia were in "big economic trouble".

Putin signalled last week that he was open to raising certain taxes to make financial ends meet during the war, noting that the United States had raised taxes on wealthy people during the Vietnam and Korean wars.

Tax hike primarily to fund 'defence and security'

The proposal is in line with a Reuters report last week. VAT accounted for 37% of federal budget revenues in 2024 and analysts estimate that the increase would generate about 1 trillion roubles ($11.9 billion) in additional revenue.

The finance ministry, which said the tax hikes would be "aimed primarily at financing defence and security," said in a statement that it was also proposing other tax increases, including on gambling businesses.

Read: Pakistan urges dialogue, restraint to end Ukraine conflict

Putin had pledged no major changes to the tax system before 2030 following the tax hikes introduced in 2025. He asked the government on September 5 to increase revenues through higher productivity, not taxes.

After meeting Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York, Trump posted on his Truth Social platform: "Putin and Russia are in BIG Economic trouble, and this is the time for Ukraine to act".

The US president's tone was in stark contrast to his red-carpet treatment for Putin at a summit in Alaska last month, part of an ostensible push to expedite an end to the war.

'No such thing as a paper bear'

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told RBC radio on Wednesday that there were statements about the Russian economy collapsing before, but said that the economy had adapted to the "special military operation" in Ukraine.

Brushing off Trump's "paper tiger" comment, Peskov said Russia was a bear, not a tiger, and "there is no such thing as a paper bear", while adding Putin valued Trump's efforts to resolve the conflict.

Read more: Putin proposes one-year extension of US-Russia nuclear arms pact

The finance ministry said the draft 2026 budget was "balanced and sustainable". The ministry has so far not released the key figures in the draft budget nor estimates of how much its proposal would generate in revenues.

"The strategic priority is to provide financial support for the country's defence and security needs and social support for families of participants in the special military operation," it said in a statement.

"The resources planned in the budget will make it possible to equip the armed forces with the necessary weapons and military equipment, pay salaries to military personnel and support their families, and modernise defence industry enterprises." ($1 = 83.7500 roubles)

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