Most Russians want to save money using their country's currency. Six out of ten people trust the ruble for keeping their cash safe. Older Russians prefer rubles more than younger people do. Young adults like saving dollars instead of rubles. The job search company SuperJob asked people about their money choices.
Foreign money became less popular among Russian savers last year. About 37 percent think dollars work better for savings accounts. Some people like euros for saving money at 28 percent. Chinese yuan appeals to 23 percent of those surveyed.
Russian trust grew for different currencies over the past year. Dollar trust went up seven points during that time. Ruble confidence rose five points among survey takers. Euro trust climbed four points higher than before. Chinese currency trust dropped four points from the previous year.
Russians picked the ruble as their top savings currency choice. About 36 percent chose rubles as the most reliable option. Dollars came second with 15 percent of votes cast. Euros finished third place with just 4 percent support.
Foreign money became less popular among Russian savers last year. About 37 percent think dollars work better for savings accounts. Some people like euros for saving money at 28 percent. Chinese yuan appeals to 23 percent of those surveyed.
Russian trust grew for different currencies over the past year. Dollar trust went up seven points during that time. Ruble confidence rose five points among survey takers. Euro trust climbed four points higher than before. Chinese currency trust dropped four points from the previous year.
Russians picked the ruble as their top savings currency choice. About 36 percent chose rubles as the most reliable option. Dollars came second with 15 percent of votes cast. Euros finished third place with just 4 percent support.