Analysis
Russian government documents (e.g., the 2021 *Main Directions of Monetary Policy*) confirm inflation control was a stated priority, and actions were taken, including Central Bank rate hikes (from 4.25% to 8.5% in 2021) and price agreements with businesses. However, inflation surged to **8.39% by year-end** (Rosstat), the highest since 2016, driven by global supply chain disruptions, food price volatility, and the ruble’s depreciation. While *measures were implemented*, their immediate impact on stabilization was limited, with inflation only easing in mid-2022. The claim conflates intent with outcome.
Background
Russia faced acute inflationary pressures in 2021 due to pandemic-related supply shocks, rising global energy prices, and a weak ruble (losing ~7% against the USD that year). The government’s response included monetary tightening by the Central Bank (independent but aligned with Kremlin priorities) and administrative measures like export bans on key commodities (e.g., wheat, fertilizers). Critics argued these steps were reactive and insufficient to curb structural inflation drivers.
Verdict summary
Mishustin’s claim about prioritizing inflation control is accurate, but the effectiveness of Russia’s 2021 measures to *stabilize* prices was mixed, with inflation peaking at 8.4% that year.