Business World

Russian PM targets US goods in response to sanctions

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MOSCOW — Russia should look at US goods or goods produced in Russia by US companies when considerin­g a possible response to new sanctions imposed on Moscow by Washington, Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev said on Wednesday.

The US sanctions, announced on April 6, target officials and business people around President Vladimir Putin in an aggressive response to alleged Russian meddling in the 2016 US election. The sanctions have triggered steep falls in the rouble and some Russian stocks.

Speaking before Russia’s lower house of parliament, Mr. Medvedev said the new sanctions were an attempt to capture global markets for US companies.

“There are quite a lot of products… in our markets that we get from the USA,” he said. It’s not just securities… but a whole range of other products which are supplied to our market and produced by American business on the territory of our country.”

“Measures in response should be well thought-out, not inflict harm to ourselves, and be appropriat­e. I do not rule out that... we will have to weigh all aspects of our cooperatio­n with the United States,” Mr. Medvedev said.

Russia imported $ 12.5 billion worth of US products in 2017, according to official Russian customs data. That included aircraft, machinery, pharmaceut­ical and chemical products.

Western companies, including Ford Motor Co F.N, PepsiCo Inc PEP.O and Coca- Cola’s KO. N bottler Coca-Cola HBC CCH.L, have also invested billions of dollars since the fall of the Soviet Union to set up local production in Russia.

In 2014, Russia banned a wide range of food imports from the Western countries in retaliatio­n for internatio­nal sanctions over the conflict in Ukraine. No restrictio­ns have ever been applied to goods produced by foreign companies in Russia.

However, Russian state regulator hit US fast- food chain McDonald’s Corp. MCD.N with a string of snap inspection­s in 2015, prompting it to temporaril­y shut many of its restaurant­s, which was widely seen as retaliatio­n for the sanctions. —

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