MOSCOW: Restaurants and cafes are closing down in Russia at the fastest pace since the start of the war in Ukraine four years ago as consumption stalls even in affluent Moscow.
The closures, visible on streets from the capital to Vladivostok 6,500 km east on the Pacific Ocean, point to a significant slowdown in Russia’s US$2.8 trillion economy, which has so far proved surprisingly resilient in the face of stringent Western sanctions.
At the BonCafe bakery in southwestern Moscow, the shelves are empty of cakes and pastries, the espresso machine is silent and owner Yekaterina Oreshkina, 39, sits amid the dust and regret of a failed business.
