Business World

West stands to lose at least $288B in assets if Russian assets seized

-

RUSSIA’S state RIA news agency said on Sunday it had calculated that the West stood to lose assets and investment­s worth at least $288 billion if it confiscate­d frozen Russian assets to help rebuild Ukraine and Moscow then retaliated.

After President Vladimir Putin sent forces into Ukraine in February 2022, the US and its allies prohibited transactio­ns with Russia’s central bank and finance ministry, blocking around $300 billion of sovereign Russian assets in the West.

US and British officials have worked in recent months to jumpstart efforts to confiscate Russian assets immobilize­d in Belgium and other European cities in order to help reconstruc­tion in Ukraine, parts of which lie in ruins. They hope Group of Seven (G7) leaders will agree to issue a stronger statement of intent when they meet in late February, around the second anniversar­y of Moscow’s invasion of Ukraine, three sources told Reuters on Dec. 28.

Russia has accused Washington of trying to strong-arm countries in Europe, where most of the Russian assets are, into signing up to similar measures, and the Kremlin has said that Moscow has a list of US, European and other assets that would be confiscate­d if Western countries press ahead.

RIA cited data which it said showed that direct investment by the European Union (EU), the G7 nations, Australia and Switzerlan­d in the Russian economy at the end of 2022 totalled $288 billion. It said EU nations held $223.3 billion of the assets, of which $98.3 billion was formally held by Cyprus, $50.1 billion by the Netherland­s and $17.3 billion by Germany.

It said the top five European investors in the Russian economy also included France with assets and investment­s worth $16.6 billion and Italy with $12.9 billion.

Among the G7 countries, it named Britain as one of the largest investors, citing data at the end of 2021 which showed British assets in Russia were worth about $18.9 billion.

It said the United States had $9.6 billion worth of Russian assets at the end of 2022, Japan $4.6 billion and Canada $2.9 billion.

Switzerlan­d and Norway, which RIA said usually signed up to anti-Russian measures, had $28.5 billion and $139 million respective­ly at the end of 2022, it said, while data showed Australia had $683 million invested at the end of last year.

Reuters could not verify the data cited by RIA. —

 ?? IRINA CHISHKOVA/UNSPLASH ?? THE KREMLIN, Moscow, Russia
IRINA CHISHKOVA/UNSPLASH THE KREMLIN, Moscow, Russia

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines