Home News Russia has borne Western sanctions before. Is this time different?

Russia has borne Western sanctions before. Is this time different?

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Ever since Russia annexed Crimea, the West has been ratcheting up economic and financial punishments that have damaged Russia’s economic prospects. The average Russian has become used to them, if still not comfortable with them.

Russian experts are more worried about the threatened new sanctions that would be imposed if Russia actually launches a military attack on Ukraine. The most extreme measures might include canceling the not-yet-operating Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline from Russia to Germany or banning Russian banks from using the U.S. dollar.

Why We Wrote This

The West has promised harsh sanctions against Russia should it invade Ukraine. But Russians have borne sanctions since 2014, and seem ready, mentally and economically, to do so again.

But even those weapons are unlikely to change the Kremlin’s plans, experts say. “If these threatened sanctions are applied, there would be some shocks to Russia’s banking system, financial position, and some industries would suffer,” says Anastasia Likhacheva, a faculty dean at Moscow’s Higher School of Economics.

“But since 2014 there has been a great deal of Russian strategic planning, and the country is much better prepared for sanctions than it was,” she adds. “I cannot imagine any sanctions that could push Russia to give up its strategic priorities” in the crisis over Ukraine and NATO.

Moscow

Nadezhda Mamonova, a Moscow office worker, says she’s learned to take life “day by day” amid talk of war with Ukraine and devastating Western sanctions that are threatened to follow.

Like most Russians, she’s been watching this movie for about eight years, ever since Russia annexed Crimea and the West began ratcheting up economic and financial punishments that, by all accounts, have caused both direct and indirect damage to Russia’s economic prospects.

“I feel it every time I go shopping,” she says, seeming to conflate Western sanctions with a host of other problems faced by Russian consumers, like inflation, high taxes, the devaluation of the ruble, and endless COVID restrictions. “I am far from politics, but these war games on both sides can only make a person feel alarmed.”

Why We Wrote This

The West has promised harsh sanctions against Russia should it invade Ukraine. But Russians have borne sanctions since 2014, and seem ready, mentally and economically, to do so again.

Ms. Mamonova’s frustrations are common among Russians, for whom daily life has gradually worsened in recent years. But the Russian economy, though stagnating, is still slowly growing. Most Russians have adapted over the past several years, and they appear ready to roll with whatever new punches may be coming.

Russian experts are more worried about the threatened new sanctions that would be imposed if Russia actually launches a military attack on Ukraine. The most extreme measures might include canceling the not-yet-operating Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline from Russia to Germany; banning Russian banks from using the U.S. dollar; and draconian sanctions against people in President Vladimir Putin’s inner circle, their families, and possibly Mr. Putin himself.

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