The Ruble Is So Bad You Can Buy a Bottle of Vodka for $2.64 - East Idaho News
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The Ruble Is So Bad You Can Buy a Bottle of Vodka for $2.64

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Getty 020215 RussianRuble?  SQUARESPACE CACHEVERSION=1422897738264iStock/Thinkstock(MOSCOW) — Prices on everything from cars to food in Moscow are soaring as the ruble tumbles to new lows and Russia’s economy stumbles toward recession. Inflation, despite price controls in some sectors, is reaching double digits.

Yet, Russian authorities have just lowered the government-regulated minimum price of vodka for the first time in years.

Now, a half-liter of vodka can be had for as little as 185 rubles, or about $2.64 according to Monday’s exchange rate. That’s down 16 percent from the previous price of 220 rubles, about $3.14.

The minimum price began last year at 89 rubles for a half-liter, roughly a pint, and was increased twice, according to the Moscow Times.

Ostensibly, the new price cut is aimed at reducing Russians’ fast-growing consumption of potentially dangerous homemade spirits, which are cheaper.

But the decision is a surprising about-face for Russian leaders. In recent years, led by President Vladimir Putin and Prime Minster Dimitri Medvedev, they have been encouraging Russians to drink less as part of an effort to combat low life expectancy, which is partly blamed on high rates of alcohol consumption.

A British report published last year found that Russian men who drink large amounts of vodka were at “extraordinarily” high risk of early death. A quarter of Russian men die before age 55, compared to about 10 percent in the United States and, according to the author of the study, the average Russian adult drinks 20 liters of vodka per year, or more than 5 gallons.

The average Russian male is expected to live barely past 70 years, according to the World Bank. In the United States, the average male lives over 78 years.


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