{"title":"Impairing Globalization: The Russo-Ukrainian War, Western Economic Sanctions and Asset Seizures","authors":"Steven Rosefielde","doi":"10.3390/jrfm17090402","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The potency of economic sanctions imposed on nations depends on demand and supply adjustment possibilities. Adverse GDP impacts will be maximal when import, export, production, distribution and finance are inflexible (universal non-substitution). This paper elaborates on these conditions and quantifies the maximum GDP loss that Western sanctions could have inflicted on Russia in 2022–2023. It reports the World Bank’s predictions, contrasts them with the results and draws inferences about the efficiency of Russia’s workably competitive markets. This paper shows that Russia’s economic system exhibits moderate universal substitutability and is less vulnerable to punitive discipline than Western policymakers suppose. The likelihood that economic sanctions will compel the Kremlin to restore Ukraine’s territorial integrity ceteris paribus is correspondingly low, even though war reduces Russia’s quality of existence. Western economic sanctions serve narrow geostrategic ends that are reconcilable with Pareto-efficient free trade and globalization, if precision-targeted, but as the Russo-Ukrainian war intensifies, an expanded array of novel and dubiously legal sanctions is degrading free trade, and spurring de-globalization and anti-Western coalitions. If this armed combat is prolonged, the goals of free trade and globalization could be set back for decades.","PeriodicalId":47226,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Risk and Financial Management","volume":"60 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2024-09-08","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Risk and Financial Management","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm17090402","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"Business, Management and Accounting","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
The potency of economic sanctions imposed on nations depends on demand and supply adjustment possibilities. Adverse GDP impacts will be maximal when import, export, production, distribution and finance are inflexible (universal non-substitution). This paper elaborates on these conditions and quantifies the maximum GDP loss that Western sanctions could have inflicted on Russia in 2022–2023. It reports the World Bank’s predictions, contrasts them with the results and draws inferences about the efficiency of Russia’s workably competitive markets. This paper shows that Russia’s economic system exhibits moderate universal substitutability and is less vulnerable to punitive discipline than Western policymakers suppose. The likelihood that economic sanctions will compel the Kremlin to restore Ukraine’s territorial integrity ceteris paribus is correspondingly low, even though war reduces Russia’s quality of existence. Western economic sanctions serve narrow geostrategic ends that are reconcilable with Pareto-efficient free trade and globalization, if precision-targeted, but as the Russo-Ukrainian war intensifies, an expanded array of novel and dubiously legal sanctions is degrading free trade, and spurring de-globalization and anti-Western coalitions. If this armed combat is prolonged, the goals of free trade and globalization could be set back for decades.
对国家实施经济制裁的效力取决于需求和供应调整的可能性。当进口、出口、生产、分销和金融缺乏灵活性(普遍非替代性)时,对国内生产总值的不利影响将达到最大。本文详细阐述了这些条件,并量化了 2022-2023 年西方制裁可能对俄罗斯造成的最大 GDP 损失。本文报告了世界银行的预测,将其与结果进行了对比,并对俄罗斯有效竞争市场的效率进行了推论。本文表明,俄罗斯的经济体系表现出适度的普遍可替代性,不像西方政策制定者想象的那样容易受到惩罚性纪律的影响。尽管战争会降低俄罗斯的生存质量,但经济制裁迫使克里姆林宫恢复乌克兰领土完整的可能性相应较低。西方的经济制裁服务于狭隘的地缘战略目的,如果目标精准,还能与帕累托效率的自由贸易和全球化相协调,但随着俄乌战争的加剧,一系列新颖且法律上可疑的制裁措施正在削弱自由贸易,刺激去全球化和反西方联盟。如果这场武装冲突旷日持久,自由贸易和全球化的目标可能会倒退几十年。