OPINION
PAUL
KRUGMAN
Laundered Money Could Be Putin’s Achilles’ Heel
Feb. 24,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/24/opinion/russia-ukraine-sanctions-offshore-accounts.htm
Paul
Krugman
By Paul
Krugman
Opinion
Columnist
The United
States and its allies aren’t going to intervene with their own forces against
Vladimir Putin’s invasion of Ukraine. I’ll leave it to others with relevant
expertise to speculate about whether we’ll send more arms to the Ukrainian
government or, if the Russian attack achieves quick success, help arm the
Ukrainian resistance.
For the
most part, however, the West’s response to Putin’s naked aggression will
involve financial and economic sanctions. How effective can such sanctions be?
The answer
is that they can be very effective, if the West shows the will — and is willing
to take on its own corruption.
By
conventional measures the Putin regime doesn’t look very vulnerable, at least
in the short run.
True,
Russia will eventually pay a heavy price. There won’t be any more pipeline
deals; there will be hardly any foreign direct investment. After all, who will
want to make long-term commitments to a country whose autocratic leadership has
shown such reckless contempt for the rule of law? But these consequences of
Putin’s aggression will take years to become visible.
And there
seems to be only limited room for trade sanctions. For that, we can and should
blame Europe, which does far more trade with Russia than America does.
The
Europeans, unfortunately, have fecklessly allowed themselves to become highly
dependent on imports of Russian natural gas. This means that if they were to
attempt a full-scale cutoff of Russian exports they would impose soaring prices
and shortages on themselves. Given sufficient provocation, they could still do
it: Modern advanced economies can be incredibly resilient in times of need.
But even
the invasion of Ukraine probably won’t be enough to persuade Europe to make
those sorts of sacrifices. It’s telling, and not in a good way, that Italy
wants luxury goods — a favorite purchase of the Russian elite — excluded from
any sanctions package.
Financial
sanctions, reducing Russia’s ability to raise and move money overseas, are more
easily doable — indeed, on Thursday President Biden announced plans to crack
down on Russian banks. But the effects will be limited unless Russia is
excluded from SWIFT, the Belgium-based system for payments between banks. And a
SWIFT exclusion might in practice mean a stop to Russian gas supplies, which
brings us back to the problem of Europe’s self-inflicted vulnerability.
Yet the
world’s advanced democracies have another powerful financial weapon against the
Putin regime, if they’re willing to use it: They can go after the vast overseas
wealth of the oligarchs who surround Putin and help him stay in power.
Everyone
has heard about giant oligarch-owned yachts, sports franchises and incredibly
expensive homes in multiple countries; there’s so much highly visible Russian
money in Britain that some people talk about “Londongrad.” Well, these aren’t
just isolated stories.
Filip
Novokment, Thomas Piketty and Gabriel Zucman have pointed out that Russia has
run huge trade surpluses every year since the early 1990s, which should have
led to a large accumulation of overseas assets. Yet official statistics show
Russia with only moderately more assets than liabilities abroad. How is that
possible? The obvious explanation is that wealthy Russians have been skimming
off large sums and parking them abroad.
The sums
involved are mind-boggling. Novokment et al estimate that in 2015 the hidden
foreign wealth of rich Russians amounted to around 85 percent of Russia’s
G.D.P. To give you some perspective, this is as if a U.S. president’s cronies
had managed to hide $20 trillion in overseas accounts. Another paper co-written
by Zucman found that in Russia, “the vast majority of wealth at the top is held
offshore.” As far as I can tell, the overseas exposure of Russia’s elite has no
precedent in history — and it creates a huge vulnerability that the West can
exploit.
But can
democratic governments go after these assets? Yes. As I read it, the legal
basis is already there, for example in the Countering America’s Enemies Through
Sanctions Act, and so is the technical ability. Indeed, Britain froze the
assets of three prominent Putin cronies earlier this week, and it could give
many others the same treatment.
So we have
the means to put enormous financial pressure on the Putin regime (as opposed to
the Russian economy). But do we have the will? That’s the trillion-ruble question.
There are
two uncomfortable facts here. First, a number of influential people, both in
business and in politics, are deeply financially enmeshed with Russian
kleptocrats. This is especially true in Britain. Second, it will be hard to go
after laundered Russian money without making life harder for all money
launderers, wherever they come from — and while Russian plutocrats may be the
world champions in that sport, they’re hardly unique: Ultrawealthy people all
over the world have money hidden in offshore accounts.
What this
means is that taking effective action against Putin’s greatest vulnerability
will require facing up to and overcoming the West’s own corruption.
Can the
democratic world rise to this challenge? We’ll find out over the next few months.
Paul
Krugman has been an Opinion columnist since 2000 and is also a distinguished
professor at the City University of New York Graduate Center. He won the 2008
Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences for his work on international trade
and economic geography. @PaulKrugman
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