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Coupons may help the poor cope - Russia

Moscow - Russian bread prices may rise in February when suppliers are expected to pass increased production costs on, and the government should consider using food coupons to aid low-income consumers, a lobby group for farmers said.

Alexander Korbut, the deputy head of Russia's Grain Union, the farmers lobby group, made clear the suggestion was aimed only at relieving pressure on the poorest consumers. With a very high grain harvest last year and new state curbs on grain exports, Russia has ample supplies for its population.

Russia's inflation, rising quickly as a result of a 50% fall in the rouble since early 2014, is expected to peak at 15 to 17% in March/April this year.

"It is inefficient to fight soaring prices, you need to address the low income of the population," Korbut told a briefing in Moscow.

"We need to go back to the idea of food coupons for people with very low income - this will cost less than other measures," He said on Monday.

READ:S&P downgrades Russia's credit rating

Korbut cited the United States' food-purchasing assistance programme Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (Snap) as an example. The practice was also common in the Soviet Union at times of food shortages.

Russia's bread prices may rise by up to 15% in 2015 if annual inflation reaches 7.5%, Korbut said. Prices for bread rose 7.5% in 2014, according to state statistic service Rosstat.

The plunging value of the rouble spurred food inflation in late 2014 and forced the government to curb grain exports. It might consider banning grain exports altogether if the restrictions already in place fail to benefit the economy as hoped.

According to Korbut, grain accounts for about 10% of bread production costs and a higher grain price is already included in bread producers' prices. However, rising fuel and transportation costs have yet to be priced in.

Earlier on Monday Russia's consumer rights watchdog said it had imposed a temporary ban on salt imports from a state Ukrainian producer, which had an estimated 24% share of the Russian market.

The rouble's decline has also driven up wholesale sugar prices in Russia by more than 80% since October, an industry source and retailers said last week.

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