Russia Unemployment Rate Falls to New Record Low

2025-12-26 17:14 By Agna Gabriel 1 min. read

Russia’s unemployment rate fell to a record low of 2.1% in November 2025, slightly below analysts’ expectations of 2.2%, continuing a trend of historically low joblessness.

The total number of unemployed declined to 1.636 million from 1.657 million in October and was well below 1.797 million a year earlier.

Officially registered unemployment edged up slightly to 0.352 million from 0.351 million.

The tight labor market reflects a widespread shortage affecting all sectors, exacerbated by military recruitment and defense industry hiring following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, as well as emigration.

Authorities project the labor shortfall could widen further in coming years, potentially reaching 2.5–5 million workers, posing challenges for economic growth and workforce availability across civilian industries.



News Stream
Russia Unemployment Rate Rises in March
The unemployment rate in Russia rose to 2.2% in March of 2026 from 2.1% in the previous month. The total number of unemployed increased to 1.674 million from 1.636 million in October but was well below 1.729 million a year earlier. The tight labor market reflects a widespread shortage affecting all sectors, exacerbated by military recruitment and defense industry hiring following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, as well as emigration.
2026-04-29
Russian Unemployment Rate Falls to Record Low
The unemployment rate in Russia fell to 2.1% in February of 2026 from 2.2% in the previous month, tying for the lowest rate on record. The result was maintained the tightening labor market trend in Russia since the pandemic shock in 2020. The war in Ukraine and the Kremlin's mobilization of working-aged men resulted in an exodus of labor force candidates.
2026-04-01
Russia Jobless Rate Below Forecasts
Russia’s unemployment rate remained steady at 2.2% in January, unchanged from December and below market expectations of 2.3%. The persistently low unemployment highlights a widespread labor shortage, exacerbated since Moscow deployed its military to Ukraine in February 2022. The number of unemployed rose slightly to 1.66 million from 1.643 million in December. Authorities project that the labor market will stay tight for years, forecasting a shortfall of 3.1 million workers by 2030.
2026-03-04