The Week (US)

U.S. sanctions won’t bite our billionair­es

- Nikolai Makeev

Moskovsky Komsomolet­s

The Trump administra­tion’s new sanctions on Russian oligarchs will hurt ordinary Russians far more than they will the elite, said Nikolai Makeev. The restrictio­ns, announced last week as a response to what the U.S. claims is Russian cybermeddl­ing in Western democracie­s, target seven oligarchs and their companies as well as 17 Russian officials. The tycoons’ U.S. assets are now frozen. Americans can’t do any business with them, and internatio­nal financial institutio­ns that use dollars will shun them. The markets’ reaction was swift: Stock prices of the affected companies crashed. But the billionair­es will likely be fine. Most are close to President Vladimir Putin, and the Kremlin has

“promised to support any businessme­n caught in an unpleasant situation.” Indeed, the Kremlin has no choice, because the state is a major shareholde­r in most of the sanctioned firms. Instead, the repercussi­ons will hit the rest of us. The ruble has already suffered its biggest daily fall relative to the dollar in more three years, and if the slide continues, inflation will skyrocket. But Russia will fight back. If it can’t use U.S. dollars, it will turn to China and use the yuan. President Trump has made the mistake of picking fights with Russia and China at the same time. As economist Natalia Milchakova says, “Washington will rue the consequenc­es of this rash policy.”

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