Despite rising inflation and a falling ruble, a small percentage of Russians are apparently still doing very well, according to Forbes' latest ranking of the 25 highest-paid Russian top managers, published Thursday.
However, at least one high earner is excluded from the list: Igor Sechin, the 54-year-old former Russian deputy prime minister and current head of state oil giant Rosneft.
Sechin took top place in 2012 with earnings of $50 million, but was excluded in 2013 after winning a lawsuit against Forbes in which he disputed the earnings figure and claimed that the ranking had damaged his professional reputation.
Collectively, the top 25 executives earned $291 million last year, 7 percent more than the year before, Forbes said. The top five highest earners all work for state-owned companies.
Andrei Kostin
1. Andrei Kostin
58 years old, president of VTB Bank — $37 million.
Kostin was born in Moscow and studied at Lomonosov Moscow State University. He was a diplomat for the Soviet Union in Australia and Britain before switching to banking in 1993, and has consistently ranked high in Forbes' earnings surveys.
Alexei Miller
2. Alexei Miller
52 years old, CEO of Gazprom — $25 million.
Miller was born in Leningrad, now St. Petersburg, and studied at the Voznesensky Financial Economic Institute. He worked in the city's Mayor's Office and Seaport Office before moving to natural gas giant Gazprom in 2000.
Mikhail Kuzovlev
3. Mikhail Kuzovlev
48 years old, president of the Bank of Moscow — $17 million.
Mikhail Kuzovlev was born in Krasnogorsk, Moscow region, and studied at the prestigious Moscow State Institute of International Relations, or MGIMO. From 2004 to 2008 he worked at a subsidiary of VTB in Cyprus before moving in 2011 to the Bank of Moscow, Russia's fifth largest bank.
German Gref
4. German Gref
50 years old, CEO of Sberbank — $16 million.
German Gref was born in Panfilov, in what is now northern Kazakhstan. From 1991 to 1998 he worked in the Mayor's Office of St. Petersburg, serving in various government positions until 2007, when he became CEO of Sberbank, Russia's largest bank.
Mikhail Zadornov
5. Mikhail Zadornov
51 years old, CEO of VTB24 — $15 million.
Mikhail Zadornov was born in Moscow and studied at the Plekhanov Moscow Institute of National Economy. He began work in the State Duma in 1994 before moving to VTB24, VTB's retail banking unit, in 2005.
Honorable Mention:
The sixth, seventh and eighth highest-paid Russian executives are Dmitry Razumov, general director of private equity firm Onexim; Ivan Streshinsky, president of USM Advisors, a private holding group that consolidates the holdings of Russia's richest man, Alisher Usmanov; and Mikhail Shamolin, CEO of conglomerate Sistema, owned by billionaire Vladimir Yevtushenkov. These three companies are all privately owned.
Rounding out the top 10 are Russian Railways CEO Vladimir Yakunin and Gazprombank CEO Andrei Akimov.
Contact the author at bizreporter@imedia.ru
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