#

​The UK Defense Intelligence: the Financial Transformation of Russian Military Service Post-Invasion

1506
It is highly likely that the salary and additional benefits are a strong incentive for personnel to join up / Photo credit: Associated Press
It is highly likely that the salary and additional benefits are a strong incentive for personnel to join up / Photo credit: Associated Press

It is highly likely that the salary and additional benefits are a strong incentive for personnel to join up

Military service in the russian Armed Forces has become increasingly lucrative since the invasion. On February 4, 2022, russian President Vladimir Putin noted that a lieutenant received 81,200 rubles per month, the UK Defense Intelligence reports. By October 2022, he announced that even mobilized private soldiers would receive 195,000 rubles per month.

It is highly likely that the salary and additional benefits are a strong incentive for personnel to join up Defense Express The UK Defense Intelligence: the Financial Transformation of Russian Military Service Post-Invasion
It is highly likely that the salary and additional benefits are a strong incentive for personnel to join up / screenshot from video

Many junior ranks serving in Ukraine are now on over 200,000 rubles per month. This is over 2.7 times the russian national average salary of 72,851 rubles. By way of comparison, 2.7 times the average UK salary would equate to over £90,000 a year

Read more: ​rUssia Likely Cancels ZAPAD 23 Joint Strategic Exercise, Signaling Shift in Military Priorities

It is highly likely that the salary and additional benefits are a strong incentive for personnel to join up, especially to those from the poorer areas of russia. However, russia is still unlikely to meet its targets for recruiting volunteers to the ranks.

Read more: ​Ukrainian Counteroffensive Gains Momentum in Bakhmut and Southern Front, While russian Forces Sustain Attacks in Kupiansk-Lyman Sector