Western powers have realised Russia is largely
immune to sanctions
Analysis: Only the financial equivalent of unleashing
a nuclear arsenal will dent Russia’s foreign assets war chest
Phillip
Inman Economics editor
@phillipinman
Fri 25 Feb
2022 16.57 GMT
The war
against Russia is one western countries want to fight with only economic
sanctions, not guns.
Russia’s
conflict with Ukraine, despite its long gestation and planning by Vladimir
Putin and his supporters in the Kremlin, was supposed to end quickly once
financial retaliation began. Yes, there would be military skirmishes on the
ground, but little more than a few casualties were expected once a range of
penalties began to bite.
The western
powers have quickly realised that unless they are willing to fire the financial
equivalent of a nuclear arsenal, Putin has made sure Russia is largely immune,
at least in the short term.
Over a
decade, Kremlin policy has carefully reduced domestic public and private sector
debt and allowed the central bank time to build a war chest of foreign assets
large enough to shore up the country’s finances for months, if not years.
This means
that the sanctions put in place over the past couple of days by the EU, US, UK,
Japan and Canada are unlikely to have any significant effect on the Russian
economy or its financial stability.
Only the
full package of measures used against Iran – shutting Russia out of the
international payments system, Swift, while also banning purchases of Russian
oil and gas – will do the trick.
As Hosuk
Lee-Makiyama, the head of the European Centre for International Political
Economy, said, Europe has allowed itself to become more integrated with Russia,
while Russia has separated itself from Europe.
He said EU
countries owned a combined €300bn of Russian assets that would be vulnerable to
confiscation if a full-blooded financial war broke out. The UK owns billions
more via firms such as BP, which has a near-20% stake in the Russian oil
company Rosneft.
“Sanctions
are one of the few options that European countries have in a conflict situation
like this. If you disconnect North Korea or Iran from the international
financial system, you do not expose yourself to that much damage.”
Speaking on
BBC News, he added: “But while I don’t say it is impossible to envisage Russia
being barred from the Swift system, it is a nuclear option that means you
exterminate yourself along with your enemy.”
Swift (the
Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication) is the main secure
messaging system that banks use to make rapid and secure cross-border payments,
allowing international trade to flow smoothly.
It
transmits trillions of dollars’ worth of deals every day, but is coming under pressure
from a Chinese government-backed rival, Cips, which Russia could use to conduct
its financial business deals supplemented by direct transactions with
counterparties.
It is also
possible for the G7 countries and EU to ban the purchase of Russian gas and
oil, but commodities analysts agree that while there is spare capacity in oil
markets to make up for the loss of Russian supplies with a price rise limited
to $140 a barrel, there is no hope of boosting gas output to fill a gap created
by a Russia ban.
Shortages
would quickly force countries in Europe to ration gas and the price would be
likely to rocket back to nine times normal levels, as seen before Christmas,
stirring memories of the 1974 oil price shock.
Andrew
Kenningham, the chief Europe economist at the consultancy Capital Economics,
said that while some countries – the Czech Republic and the Baltic states – had
pushed for bans on Russian gas, “others are more reluctant and it would
presumably take much more devastating developments in the conflict to trigger
such measures”.
Tom Mayne,
a Russia expert at the thinktank Chatham House, said there was room to improve
the current sanctions that allow a Russian kleptocracy access to London’s
financial markets.
In a report
last year, the thinktank said an effective anti-kleptocracy drive would “close
legal loopholes, demand transparency from public institutions, deploy
anti-corruption sanctions against post-Soviet elites and prosecute British
professionals who enable money laundering by kleptocrats”.
Even the
ramped-up sanctions announced by Boris Johnson fall short of this effective ban
on illegal Russian money entering UK economic life. The UK is keen to go
further than the EU with restrictions on Russian energy imports, but the EU has
allowed itself to be much more dependent than the UK, limiting its appetite for
further sanctions.
Without
bans on gas and oil exports, and expulsion from international payments systems,
the impact of sanctions will be limited.
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