Economic Penalties for Putin's Aggression Threaten To Impoverish the World
Countries insulating themselves against future sanctions may block trade that lifted billions from misery.

Casualties were inevitable the moment Vladimir Putin sent Russia's army across the border into Ukraine. But after the initial tally in lost and shattered lives, destroyed homes, and depleted wealth, we're likely to discover that we've also lost a world of expanded trade that pulled billions of people out of poverty by removing barriers to free exchange. The walls were already rising because of pandemic restrictions and politicians' thirst for greater control, but the war in Ukraine has accelerated a process that threatens human freedom and prosperity.
Economic sanctions and the retreat of Western businesses in response to the invasion of Ukraine have left Russia largely isolated. But they've also made clear that the integration of the global economy in recent decades wasn't inevitable and is vulnerable to political decision-making.
"The damage sanctions are doing to the Russian economy and the substantial costs to central Europe if Russia cuts off its access to natural gas and oil in response may make governments pursue self-reliance and disentangle themselves from economic connections," warns economist Adam S. Posen in Foreign Affairs. He supports sanctioning Russia on ethical and national security grounds but predicts far-reaching consequences. That governments around the globe are likely to take lessons from the sanctions against Russia was emphasized by Putin himself.
"Now everybody knows that any assets could be basically stolen," the Russian dictator seethed in a March 16 speech in response to the seizure of foreign reserves held overseas. He predicted that countries would respond by converting foreign reserves into physical stores of wealth, such as food, land, and gold that aren't vulnerable to international action. There's enormous irony in a national leader who violated rules against rolling tanks into neighboring countries caught off-guard by the confiscation of funds entrusted to other nations, but Putin wasn't alone in predicting strong reactions. Predictably, some even see opportunity in encouraging disengagement with global systems.
"The harsh reality has sobering implications for developing countries vulnerable to sanctions," economic columnist Huang Yongfu noted for China's state-owned CGTN. "In order to secure strategic independence, developing countries should urgently coalesce around and collaborate with emerging countries such as China to develop alternative financial and technological infrastructures that make them sanctions-proof."
It's unlikely that anybody really believes that the Chinese government, which developed a social-credit system for keeping its own citizens in line, would balk at using financial clout to twist arms. But it's probable that actions taken towards Russia make the weaponization of trade and finance seem inevitable and push some governments to seek like-minded partners, or at least alternative systems to which they can turn. That's especially true since the world was already breaking apart.
Posen emphasizes that, starting well before the war, "populists and nationalists have erected barriers to free trade, investment, immigration, and the spread of ideas" and China tussled with the West over trade and security issues, resulting in barriers that corrode globalization.
To this you can add recent supply-chain disruptions largely caused by lockdown orders and other policy reactions to the COVID-19 pandemic. Relying on suppliers and partners across the world has come to seem enormously risky, spurring a return to local manufacturing, even if that means higher costs.
"COVID-19 has disrupted global value chains (GVCs)," four economists noted last year for the Center for Economic Policy Research's VoxEU. "Some observers expect firms to respond by abandoning their pursuit of lower production costs in favour of building stronger resilience in production – by reshoring, nearshoring, and/or diversifying sources of production."
That process has been encouraged in the United States by two consecutive presidents, first Donald Trump and then Joe Biden, wedded to economic nationalism. "When we use taxpayers' dollars to rebuild America, we are going to do it by buying American: buy American products, support American jobs," Biden vowed in the recent State of the Union address. He's unlikely to get much pushback from the public; while support for free trade rose under Trump it has since declined, according to Gallup. More Americans (61 percent) see trade as good for economic growth than see it as a threat (35 percent), but the numbers swing more as a matter of partisan politics than according to principled commitment.
That's a shame because free-trade advocates are correct. While a strong case can be made that free trade is a basic human right involving consensual relations among individuals, it's also a miraculous cure for misery. Over the last half-century or so, economists have rediscovered comparative advantage and that "trade openness is a necessary—even if not sufficient—condition for economic growth and reducing poverty," as Pierre Lemieux wrote for the Cato Institute's Regulation in 2020.
"A dramatic increase in developing country participation in trade has coincided with an equally sharp decline in extreme poverty worldwide," agrees the World Bank. Specifically, the organization found, "the global poverty rate, defined as the share of world's population living below the [international poverty line], has dropped from 35.9 percent in 1990 to 10 percent in 2015 – more than a 70 percent reduction."
But that progress ground to a halt in recent years as international commerce slowed. The number of people living below the poverty line ticked back up, while Americans experience economic pain of their own. Higher barriers and long-term reductions in trade can only make things worse.
"If the global economy splinters further and countries retreat, from a productive perspective, to a domestic or regional focus, the implications are quite large," finance reporter Ron Insana comments at CNBC. "Prices for domestically made goods are generally higher that those that are produced abroad. That means a relative shift in inflationary pressures beyond the pandemic-induced price spikes we've already seen."
"With less economic interconnectedness, the world will see lower trend growth and less innovation," concurs Posen, who predicts that the world will fracture into competing economic blocs. "Domestic incumbent companies and industries will have more power to demand special protections."
Economic and financial sanctions may cause Russia pain and add to the cost of invading Ukraine. But as governments around the world raise barriers and try to insulate themselves from future uses of weaponized trade and finance, the result is certain to be a world that is poorer and less free.
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Hear hear.
Russia supplies the world with nothing of significance other than oil and gas.
And they will continue to do so if they want to continue to eat.
Republicans and Libertarians are clueless as to how the world
works.
It's truly Laughable how retarded they are.
Impoverishing the world is the goal of the oligarch. They want it all and everyone else to have nothing.
Trump was an asshole for starting more unprovoked trade wars. Biden is an asshole for continuing them. Putin is an asshole for starting a shooting war! I'd rather live poorer than normal in a trade war, than live (or die) in the middle of a shooting war.
"The West" had a choice between "business as usual", sending more money to Russia, to buy Russian crap, to fund Russia's killing of innocent Ukrainians, or cut back on funding these murders! Economic war in this case is the lesser of two evils...
(Economic wars against Russian artists, and domestically produced vodka, etc., is clearly crazy though, as Reason has also pointed out.)
You are about to see hunger in places you never though you would...I hope your moral pride fills your belly.
Without the grain feed for the animals and the petro fertilizer you kooks are about to know what real food inflation is.
You want it? Okay but let's remember how sanctimonious you sounded, so no complaints later.
You mean Capitalists are going to deprive the poor of food and the essentials of life?
Capitalists must truly be evil people. I'm sure you agree.
"That's a shame because free-trade advocates are correct. While a strong case can be made that free trade is a basic human right involving consensual relations among individuals, it's also a miraculous cure for misery. Over the last half-century or so, economists have rediscovered comparative advantage and that "trade openness is a necessary—even if not sufficient—condition for economic growth and reducing poverty," as Pierre Lemieux wrote for the Cato Institute's Regulation in 2020."
I mean, there is a reason Trump won. While overall the standard of living has increased, pitting American workers against their cheaper counterparts elsewhere in the world was always a recipe for disaster. This was always going to be an issue. A cheaper iphone is great if you can get it but if you lose your living then you're not really gonna be excited by cheap electronics.
Moreover, the very things that integrated the world economy (ie. better overall economic output, freer trade, etc.) are still going to be desirable to governments. While dictatorships and the like will retreat, the allure of being integrated into the global economy is always going to be there to pull them back in.
Quite frankly I think the idea that this is some "never coming back" point is advanced too quickly.
Also, fuck Koch Industries for not pulling out of Russia, you fucking sniveling cunts.
"Also, fuck Koch Industries for not pulling out of Russia, you fucking sniveling cunts."
Well, yes. On the other hand, Koch has a total of 600 people employed in Russia. Their main product? Window glass, primarily for residential and business applications. I don't really see the point of punishing private Russian citizens for Putin's idiocy. Likewise, who does a fast-food-chain "pull-out" of Russian hurt -- not Putin, nor his circle of idiots. Note: I am not chastising those who want to curtail business with Russian, that's their choice, but let's face it -- "When the Bulls fight, only the grass suffers."
Meanwhile Biden is looking all over for the world for oil instead of allowing Americans to work to get it out of the ground here.
+
" there is a reason Trump won. "
Ya, Republicans wanted to create a Nanny State to protect them from free market competition from Mexican Labor.
Or was it more Republican Race Hate?
Oh come on! Can't you doublethink?
What matters is who and intentions. When a foreign government restricts trade on another country it's an act of war because it is intended to impoverish the people. But when a domestic government restricts trade on it's own country it's an act of benevolence because it's intended to strengthen domestic industry.
See? The same government action against the same people has a totally different result depending on which government is doing it and its intentions!
Intentions are magic!
Economics is why the west coordinated the 2014 coup. The oligarchs aren’t going to suffer. Our western governments would rather WW3.
It’s the reason a negotiated reasonable end to this isn’t our objective. We are responsible for this.
Research isn’t decommissioning Cold War weapons. It violates the Biological Weapons Convention & Biological Weapons Anti-Terrorism Act of 1989.
Every American involved with or funding these Ukraine labs, like Victoria Nuland, needs to go to prison.
“On 11 March, the UN Security Council convened at Russia's request to discuss the "biological activities of the US on the territory of Ukraine". Earlier, the Russian Ministry of Defence discovered 30 biolabs in Ukraine and released documents indicating collaboration between Kiev and the Pentagon on studying highly dangerous pathogens.
"The US State Department says that the public mission of the biolabs in Ukraine is about securing Cold War era Soviet bioweapons", says former Pentagon analyst and retired US Air Force Lt. Col. Karen Kwiatkowski.
"The companies that operate and have constructed these labs competed far more recently for contracts awarded by the US Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA), so the Cold war or Soviet era weapons disposal rings hollow. In fact, the successful 2014 US colour revolution in Ukraine opened the door for fresh DTRA contracts, and these facilities appear to be relatively modern. What they are working on is not strictly defensive, and Under Secretary of State Victoria Nuland publicly stated as much before the US Congress a few days ago".
Nuland's exchange with Senator Marco Rubio during the Tuesday hearings at the Senate triggered a heated debate, given that Washington had previously strongly denied the presence of any US-run biolabs in Ukraine.
When asked whether Ukraine possesses "chemical or biological weapons", Nuland admitted that "Ukraine has biological research facilities." “
It's almost refreshing knowing exactly who is either in thrall of or deliberately perpetrating Russian propaganda. It must kill y'all to know that Hillary was right all along.
Like cockroaches fleeing the light. We see you.
What was Hillary proven right about?
Your friends call something they don't like "Russian disinfo" first and ask questions later. Did you read about the Hunter Biden laptop revelation, or was that not mentioned in the DNC newsletter? There were certainly plenty of disinfo op at CNN, where Cuomo is going scorched earth on his former employer.
Most crime and unethical / authoritative behavior come from YOUR side, Tony. That dates back to the Metoo days, when Hollywood was revealed to be a rape cult. Do you remember red state governors building Covid camps and seizing war powers to freeze bank accounts of people for merely donating to BLM?
Seriously, you look at cities like SF and accuse us of being "cockroaches"? Hilarious. The republicans aren't making inroads with minorities because based on actual policy (for the most part), they're merely benefitting from liberal lunacy turning off less indoctrinated progressives.
Your activist buddies proudly display Soviet / commie iconography in many of their protests. They proclaim themselves to be Leninists and admirers of Che on camera. But Trump says some generic compliment on Putin, and you lose your shit.
Why don't you explain specifically why Hunter Biden owning a laptop is a scandal. Not a single person has taken me up on this offer.
Yes, MeToo exposed a lot of rapists in Hollywood. Donald Trump is a rapist. He bragged about raping people. He was the president.
That's more than can be said for any performative socialists in our midst. Do you never tire of going apeshit hysterical over the hobbies of teenagers? Trump was the president. No communist ever will be.
It’s been noted that you haven’t refuted that Nuland admitted that the Ukrainian bio labs were researching illegal biological weapon materials.
But you still called it Russian propaganda. You’re just a shill.
No she didn't, but even if she did, this is still like the 12th in a long chain of pretexts Putin has offered for why he was entitled to rain death on Ukraine and install a puppet government.
So is your argument that the invasion is justified? Is it because of Nazis, or is it because of NATO, or is it because of biolabs? What's gonna be the excuse tomorrow?
Those are all good reasons to invade. They’re not excuses.
Would they exist in Mexico, the US would invade too.
It is well known that the Libertarian Propaganda industry is heavily infiltrated by Russian sponsored propagandists.
It is one of the reasons why Libertarian policies have been such a spectacular failure every time they are tried.
Don't forget that CATO was created by the Koch family for the purpose of producing propaganda to assist in increasing their coal and oil profits. It was even called the Koch institute for a time.
Meanwhile in
bizarro worldthe Biden Administration’s return to normalcy:Amirabdollahian said the pause in the Vienna talks could help resolve several of the outstanding issues and suggested that Russia was no impediment.
"If we can reach an understanding with the United States on the few issues that are our red line and get to a final agreement, Russia will stand with us until the end of talks to reach a good, stable and strong nuclear deal," he said.
https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/russia-says-it-has-written-guarantees-iran-nuclear-deal-2022-03-15/
Putin may be the greatest threat to the world since Nazi Germany per the 24hr news cycle, but that doesn’t mean sanctions should impede the US endorsed plan for Russia to provide Iran with nuclear power plants.
Those who think it’s wonderful that The Islamic Republic is concerned about greenhouse gases should educate themselves on what else nuclear power plants are useful for.
This isn’t the first time this has been brought up in the comments, but frankly I’m surprised that there isn’t more coverage of this.
Trade is certainly beneficial, but what "lifted billions from misery" isn't unfettered trade with the West, it's a combination of improved trade, improved technologies, improved medicine, and improved education.
A more fragmented worldwide system of trade will reduce wealth and growth a little, but the benefit will be much more resilience to the authoritarian and corrupt impulses of governments across the globe, foremost in the West.
The best thing that could happen to the US is for the dollar to lose its status as reserve currency and for the US financial and banking system to be relegated to being just one of many global players.
A hundred years ago, Germany faced harsh economic sanctions as punishment for its role in WWI. If only we could go back and see if that had the desired effect of encouraging them to select more reasonable and peaceful leaders....
The difference being, that was after hostilities had ended. Rather than allow Germany and, specifically, individual Germans to return to a reasonable life and economy after the armistice, they wanted to exact reparations. This after they lost 15% of their male population to the war and were so strapped they were to the point of eating the seed corn, metaphorically.
The treaty of Versailles basically said Germany had to pay for the whole mess. In modern currency that was hundreds of billions of dollars worth. Again, this is AFTER the war was ostensibly over.
Economically crippling a nation in a war is part of war. It is why we bombed out cities to stop factory production in WWII, for example. But doing so after the war is what caused the strife that led to Nazi takeovers. Possibly the most amazing thing in the 20th century was the Marshall plan, making former enemies the second and third largest and most vibrant economies in the world less than a generation later, allies and never foes. A rare case of learning from the previous generation's mistake.
But Russia is currently at war and we're only as neutral in this war as we were with Lend/Lease in WWII. We're not shooting, but NATO has taken a side. So... It's different.
If they stopped the war and an armistice was signed with Ukraine and we STILL had crippling sanctions that affected even the peasants, that would be more similar.
All that said, economically crippling Russia is dangerous. If Putin is forced out with a crushed economy there will be a power vacuum. Power vacuums seldom go well, at least in the short term and very often in the long term.
So you are saying that the world should have continued to trade with Germany as they were slaughtering millions of Jews, and were doing their best to take over the world.
Well done CE. Well done... You cute little Nazi you.
>>Economic Penalties ... Threaten To Impoverish the World
war on the middle class never pretty.
Reason sounds like the capitalists selling Lenin the rope with which they will be hanged.
Reason - like all Libertarian propaganda groups, exists to produce nonsense propaganda for whomever pays them.
Tobacco Industry
Coal Insustry
Oil Industry
Russia.
Doesn't matter as long as they get the money.
Despite the most fervent efforts by the pimps of libertarianism, greed is not becoming of us.
We can either isolate Russia economically or we can start shooting. Or we can just let them take over other countries on its leader's insane whims. Pick one.
Biden is aiming for an all-of-the-above approach
How lucky are we that we got a foreign policy expert as president instead of, say, a cheesy reality TV figure whose lifestyle is funded by the enemy.
I assume you are being sarcastic, right?
I mean, even Biden's friends and supporters understand that the man is an idiot on foreign policy.
I dunno, his actions prior to the Russia invasion united the world in common cause and made all of his critics look like idiots. I haven't seen such a foreign policy win since Obama killed bin Laden.
Trump's reaction to the Invasion was to get on his knees and offer Putin a BJ.
Biden on the other hand has done a remarkably good job of punishing Russia, while not engaging them militarily.
Well done Biden.
"How lucky are we that we got a foreign policy expert"
Afghanistan say "wut"
Strange how a wizard of foreign policy has a 37% approval rating (despite media lapdogs protecting him) and the opposition party enjoys a 11% lead on midterm polls. What mind trick will foreign policy master Biden use to compel Venezuela to give us more oil?
Gas was 6 bucks per gallon in CA before he invasion. It's bucks now. No one under the 1% will see any sort of meaningful economic growth for a long ass time. No one would give a rat's ass about Biden foreign policy skillz, not when he can't take care of his own house. Seriously, what drugs are you taking to remain so willfully blind?
I know, I know, Joe Biden sucks because some tits and legs on FOX News said something about gas prices and you have no capacity for independent thought.
Strange how a wizard of foreign policy has a 37% approval rating
Republicans hate Biden. That is why so many of them support Russia.
Yet, you and your progressive friends are driven by greed and envy. It's what keeps you going, day in and day out.
This one.
Everyone is driven by greed and envy. Only libertarians make them to be virtues.
How naive and very "US Chamber of Commerce"-sounding. Great in theory, but global trade has never been free or fair. As long as people are in charge of countries, they will seek advantage over others. We looked the other way while China institutionalized IP theft and subsidized their industries to the detriment of US industries. People accepted that asymmetry as long as there were other perceived benefits. It was bound to change at some point and the only ones clamoring for it to continue are the remaining people still getting rich (Disney, Hollywood, NBA, Google, Apple, Nancy Pelosi, Joe Biden, Microsoft). Notice the list doesn't include "most people."
Libertarians would argue that the Allies would be best to continue doing business with Hitler's Germany while they murdered tens of millions and worked to take over the world.
They worship money above all else, and that makes them traitors of the highest order.
Both RINOs and Lefties demanding this will soon cry about the cost of ALL food.
Who do you think makes a huge percentage of the world's grain and ESPECIALLY petro fertilizer?
For those who think Russia can't sell it? You have been fooled.
Just means WE in the WEST are refusing to buy it.
So Russia will now sell it to everyone else and MAKE MORE.
Due to these idiotic sanctions everything Russia sells is going through the roof.
They have people lined up for their natural gas, minerals, lumber, petro, fertilizer and grain.
Biden has literally shot us in the foot.
"Economic Penalties for Putin's Aggression Threaten To Impoverish the World"
Almost like that's the goal, like it would be a... great reset... to build back better from.
So global corporations, exploiting third world countries for cheap, raw materials, exploiting poor, over populated countries for cheap labor, to provide trinkets to the rich, residents of wealthy nations (trinkets that end up in landfills) is a basic, human right? We are not talking about an even exchange of goods and services or individuals making rational choices in their own self interest. We are talking about the commoditization of human beings on a global scale. This isn't Adam Smith.
Globalization works until it doesn’t . It’s one thing if your sneakers are made Asia .It’s an entirely different thing with things essential to our economy. The free traders have been saying for 30 yrs if we trade with China they will become more like us . Actually it’s the reverse , surveillance capitalism is making us more like them . We shouldn’t trade with people opposed to our way of life.