Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 27 – Russians must
recognize that sanctions are “the new economic and political reality” in which
they live and overcome three widespread and government-promoted misconceptions
about such sanctions if the country is going to be able to cope with them as
well as possible, according to a senior Russian scholar.
In an article in today’s “Nezavisimaya
gazeta,” Aleksei Portansky, a professor at the Higher School of Economics and a
researcher at IMEMO at the Academy of Sciences, says that these misconceptions
have arisen because only a few years ago hardly anyone thought they would be
possible at all (ng.ru/politics/2014-06-27/3_kartblansh.html).
The first misconception is that “the
West will not move toward serious sanctions because this will harm itself.”
Those who believe this point to disagreements between the United States and Europe
and suffer from “the illusion” that Moscow can in every case play on these
disagreements. In fact, “the West is capable of imposing sanctions even to its
own harm.”
The second misconception is that the
West will not apply sanctions because Moscow has “declared in advance that they
will be counterproductive and without any prospect of working.” But despite this brave front, he writes, “independent
economists” warn that even the first round of sanctions “cannot fail to have a
negative impact on the Russian economy.”
If the sanctions regime is
toughened, that impact will be greater.
Already, capital flight has
accelerated: more capital left Russia during the first three months of 2014 as
a result of sanctions than it did during all of 2013 when sanctions were not in
place. Capital flight not only slows
economic growth but also puts more pressure on the ruble and increases
inflation.
If sanctions are maintained at the
current level, Russia’s GDP will be 1-1.5 percent lower than if they were not
in place, something Russians perhaps can absorb. But there is another danger: Russian
companies currently borrow more than 700 billion US dollars from Western banks
and may not be able to renew those loans except on less favorable terms.
Avoiding that problem, Portansky
says, is “almost impossible” because “in fact everything will depend on the position
of the US which extremely effectively controls the international financial
sphere and over the course of recent years has only strengthened this control.”
And the third misconception involves
Russia’s supposed ability to use the World Trade Organization to block
sanctions. Prime Minister Dmitry
Medvedev has suggested this, but there are few reasons to believe that the
scenario he suggests is possible. The record does not suggest that Moscow will
be successful.
Russia has already brought two suits
against the EU and is threatening to do the same against the US. “How any of
these will end, no one can know in advance. But in any case,” the outcomes will
depend on the competence of those making the case and “in no way on [Russia’s]
opposition to other countries.”
Thinking otherwise as many in Moscow
now appear to do won’t help Russia to cope with the sanctions.
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