By Darya Korsunskaya
       LONDON, April 24 (Reuters) - Stress scenarios from
Russia's economy ministry envisage GDP and real income growth
almost grinding to a halt next year and the rouble diving from
around 93 per dollar now to 107 as investments and oil prices
fall, according to documents seen by Reuters. 
    The baseline scenario unveiled by Economy Minister Maxim
Reshetnikov on Tuesday paints a rosier picture, with the
ministry improving its GDP growth forecast for 2024 to 2.8%.
    But even in this, the most optimistic of three scenarios,
the ministry worsened its inflation outlook and expects the
rouble to steadily weaken. 
    The economy ministry declined to comment on the stress
scenario, the most pessimistic. 
    Reshetnikov pointed to risks of a global economic slowdown,
continued sanctions pressure and restrictions on Russia's labour
market, which he said were factored into the ministry's
mid-level, "conservative" forecast. 
    The conservative and stress scenarios envisage lower volumes
of Russian oil and gas production and exports.
    The stress scenario accounts for the export price of Russian
oil falling to $58.5 per barrel as early as this year, and
dropping to $51.8 per barrel in 2025. Russia's Urals crude
 currently trades at around $79 per barrel.
    Should export prices for oil and gas and other commodities
decline to the extent forecast in the stress scenario, GDP
growth is seen slowing to 1.5% this year and 0.2% in 2025,
compared with 2.8% and 2.3% in the baseline forecast. 
    In that case, fixed capital investment would rise only 0.5%
this year and fall by 1.5% in 2025; real growth in disposable
income - put at 5.4% last year - would drop to 1.9% this year
and 0.9% next.
    Under the stress scenario, the ministry forecasts that the
rouble would cross well beyond the 100 threshold by 2025,
averaging 106.9 that year, and sink to 120 per dollar by 2027. 
    Inflation this year, already set to exceed the central
bank's 4% target at 5.1%, would be close to last year's level at
7%. In 2025, it would exceed the bank's target again.  
    Below is a table with the economy ministry's forecasts for
2024-27 under the baseline, conservative and stress scenarios:
    
 INDICATOR        SCENARIO  2023,  2024   2025   2026   2027
                            fact                        
 Oil price,       Baseline  82.6   79.5   75.1   72.0   71.2
 Brent, $/bbl     Cons.            77.5   68.8   62.1   59.1
                  Stress           75.5   68.8   62.1   59.1
                                                        
 Export price     Baseline  64.5   65.0   65.0   65.0   65.0
 for Russian      Cons.            62.5   58.3   54.7   52.9
 oil, $/bbl       Stress           58.5   51.8   47.1   45.1
 Dollar/rouble    Baseline  84.7   94.7   98.6   101.2  103.8
 rate             Cons.            96.2   102.7  107.1  110.8
                  Stress           97.0   106.9  115.1  120.4
 Exports,         Baseline  424.2  428.7  455.7  473.8  496.0
 billion $        Cons.            419.7  405.7  409.5  416.4
                  Stress           395.3  365.7  359.9  361.9
 Imports,         Baseline  303.3  324.1  349.4  365.1  373.7
 billion $        Cons.            315.7  327.8  337.6  345.3
                  Stress           293.9  290.1  294.6  300.6
 Trade balance,   Baseline  120.9  104.5  106.4  108.7  122.3
 billion $        Cons.            104.0  77.9   71.8   71.0
                  Stress           101.4  75.6   65.3   61.4
 Current account  Baseline  50.2   27.9   26.6   25.3   34.0
 balance,         Cons.            27.2   23.2   19.4   22.6
 billion $        Stress           26.4   19.6   11.6   8.7
 GDP growth, %    Baseline  3.6    2.8    2.3    2.3    2.4
                  Cons.            2.2    1.6    1.6    1.7
                  Stress           1.5    0.2    0.7    1.1
 Industrial       Baseline  3.5    2.5    2.3    2.3    2.5
 output growth,   Cons.            2.0    0.3    2.1    1.7
 %                Stress           1.2    -1.7   1.7    1.1
 Year-end         Baseline  7.4    5.1    4.0    4.0    4.0
 inflation rate,  Cons.            6.0    4.4    4.0    4.0
 %                Stress           7.0    5.3    3.8    3.5
 Capital          Baseline  9.8    2.3    2.7    3.0    3.2
 investment       Cons.            1.2    1.7    1.9    2.2
 growth, %        Stress           0.5    -1.5   0.0    1.2
 Retail trade     Baseline  6.4    7.7    4.8    3.9    3.1
 turnover, %      Cons.            6.0    3.5    3.0    2.5
                  Stress           3.5    1.7    1.7    1.7
 Real wages, %    Baseline  7.8    6.5    3.6    2.8    2.5
                  Cons.            4.6    2.6    2.3    2.0
                  Stress           2.0    1.3    1.3    1.3
 Real disposable  Baseline  5.4    5.2    3.5    3.0    2.6
 incomes, %       Cons.            3.6    2.1    2.0    1.9
                  Stress           1.9    0.9    0.8    0.8
 Unemployment, %  Baseline  3.2    3.0    3.0    3.0    3.0
                  Cons.            3.1    3.2    3.3    3.3
                  Stress           3.1    3.5    3.8    3.8
 
 (Reporting by Darya Korsunskaya; Writing by Alexander Marrow;
Editing by Kevin Liffey)