SWIFT Sanction on Russia
What is SWIFT
Founded in Brussels on May 03,
1973, it stands for “Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication”
legally called as S.W.I.F.T. SCRL, and serves as the intermediary and executor
of financial transactions between banks worldwide. Overseen by the central
banks of Belgium, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Netherland, UK, USA, Switzerland
and Sweden as well as the European central Bank. It doesn’t facilitate fund
transfer, rather sends payment orders through secure messaging system spread
over around 11,000 financial institutions in over 200 countries, which must be
settled by correspondent accounts that the institutions have with each other. To exchange banking transactions, each financial
institution must have a banking relationship by either being legally organised
as a bank or through its affiliation with at least one bank. As stated, it only
transport financial messages in a secured manner only & is not involved in
any type of clearing or settlements of funds. Further, it’s a cooperative
society under Belgian Law & is owned by its member financial institutions.
What
is so crucial about SWIFT
As
majority the financial transactions flows through SWIFT, which makes it the economic
lifeline of the country. Similarly, Russian banks and financial institutions
rely on it too, to do business with and receive payments globally. As Russia being
world’s largest provider of oil and gas, so it also depends heavily on such mechanism
to receive funds for its commodity sales worldwide. Thus, cutting off Russia
from SWIFT can disrupt its economy. Taking instance of Iran, when all of its
banks were cut off from SWIFT as part of sanction between 2012 and 2016,
resulted in near collapse of its economy as the oil exports plummeted sharply
from more than three million barrels a day to about one million barrels a day.
Impact of Sanctions
on Russia
As the Russia invades Ukraine, the talks of banning Russia from
SWIFT becomes prominent taking point, as part of the west induced sanctions. As
USA and its allies are reluctant about launching this minuteman missile like
sanction against Russia but for them, cutting Russia out of the SWIFT would be
the one of the toughest financial steps they could take, damaging the Russia’s economy
immediately and in long term. The move could cut Russia off from most
international financial transaction, including profits from oil and gas
production, which accounts for more than forty percent of the country’s
revenue. And due to this cutting Russia off from the payment network will be one
of the toughest way to weaken Russia in response to its attack on Ukraine.
It is not the first time that Russia is being threatened to
be barred from SWIFT. Allies on both sides of Atlantic also dangled the SWIFT
option in 2014, when Russia annexed Crimea and backed separatist forces in eastern
Ukraine (now Donetsk & Luhansk). Then Russia declared that kicking it out
of SWIFT would be equivalent to a declaration of war, resulting in shelving the
idea by the allies.
Alternative to SWIFT
Since 2014, Russia has
its own financial messaging system (like SFMS of India, Ripple & Staller of
USA, INXTCS of EU & SIPS of China) called SPFS (Financial messaging system
of the Bank of Russia) which handles about a fifth of their domestic payments.
Will
SWIFT be used in Russian Sanctions
Some of world leaders pushing for
Russia’s access to the SWIFT payment system to be revoked as part of sanctions while,
others appear reluctant to use the measure too soon amid fears over increased
aggression or disruption to global energy supply chains. Earlier USA has succeeded
in persuading SWIFT system to kick out Iran, over its nuclear program, but kicking
Russia out of SWIFT would hurt other economies, including those of the key allies
like Germany.
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