Russia
Prepares For Split With International Banking System
Russia
has an alternative already in place in case it is cut from SWIFT — and
short-term setbacks would likely be followed by long-term gains
Fri, Mar 24, 2017
Russia
has successfully developed and implemented an alternative should it be excluded
from international banking systems, according to a
recent report.
As
far as western sanctions go, by far Russia's largest vulnerability is in its
banking sector, which for better or for worse is tied to the hip with
international banking.
Although Russia's alternative system to SWIFT
isn't fully functional, Russia would likely come out on top in the long-term
If
Russia wishes to maintain the status quo, there's not much that can be done
about this dependency. But shortly after sanctions were announced in 2014,
Moscow set out to prepare for the worst-case scenario: being cut off from the
Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT) system.
In
layman's terms, SWIFT allows for fast and (allegedly) secure international
financial transfers. In fifty years when you are able to use your Bank of
America debit card on the Moon (for a low fee of 2,000 moon rubles), it will be
because of SWIFT or a system similar to it.
There
are two issues surrounding SWIFT "cut-off" for Russia: 1. Is it
likely to happen? and 2. Is Russia prepared for it?
Regarding
the first question: The reality is that Washington's European poodles realize
that cutting Russia from SWIFT would be a disaster. In 2015, European
Central Bank policymaker Ewald Nowotny "warned against kicking
Russian banks out of the SWIFT payments transfer system as part
of tighter sanctions on Moscow."
Such a move "we
would see as very problematic because it could perhaps undermine confidence
in this system," the governor of Austria's central bank
told reporters in Brussels after meeting European Commissioner Pierre
Moscovici.
Of
course, this hasn't stopped Europe and Washington from threatening to pull the
SWIFT plug.
We
have a very low opinion of European and American geopolitical strategy; that
being said, we have a hard time believing that Washington would seriously go
forward with axing Russia's access to SWIFT.
If
it did though, things would certainly get interesting. Which leads us to our
second question: Is Russia prepared?
In
the short-term: Definitely not. In the long-term it could be one of the best
things to ever happen to Russia and all other nations that are tired of
Washington's economic and military shenanigans.
If the Society for Worldwide
Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT) is shut down in Russia, the
country’s banking system will not crash, according to Central Bank Governor
Elvira Nabiullina. Russia has a substitute.
"There were threats
that we can be disconnected from SWIFT. We have finished working on our own
payment system, and if something happens, all operations in SWIFT format will
work inside the country. We have created an alternative," Nabiullina
said at a meeting with President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday.
She also added that 90
percent of ATMs in Russia are ready to accept the Mir payment system, a
domestic version of Visa and MasterCard.
Izvestia daily reported that
as of January 2016, 330 Russian banks had been connected to the SWIFT
alternative, the system for transfer of financial messages (SPFS).
The
alternative system is far from fully functional, however: "It doesn’t work
from 9pm to 5am Moscow time and costs up to five cents per wire transfer, which
is regarded expensive."
And
using Crimea as an example (Western banks refuse
to transfer foreign currency payments from Crimea via the SWIFT transaction
system), there would be numerous headaches that would likely last a very long
time.
But
as Naked Capitalism wrote back in November, 2014:
[S]etting up a payments
channel outside SWIFT can enable Russia to establish a financial system for
those who don’t want to be subject to US dictates.
Banks
that did business with Iran, both before and after the SWIFT sanctions, were
hit with money-laundering sanctions. The payments were dollar payments and were
cleared thought the banks’ New York branches, making them subject to US law.
All
dollar transactions between banks are settled at the end of the business day in
New York; interbank payment systems ultimately depend on a central bank
backstop, and many large payments run over the Fed’s interbank system, Fedwire.
[...]
In addition, there are
likely businesses in Europe that are not keen about how complying with the EU
sanctions against Russia is hurting their business. It isn’t clear how many
would be willing to walk on the wild side and defy sanctions, but processing
transactions through a Russian-controlled payment system would be far less
susceptible to detection than through SWIFT.
In other words, this measure
is intended to reduce the effectiveness of using the dollar dominance in
payments as a weapon. Whether the Russians can launch a robust enough system
quickly is an open question, but this is a sensible defensive and potentially
offensive measure. It may have longer-term ramifications if other countries
that are not happy with the US decide to employ it for practical or political
reasons.
For
Washington, any short-term gains from cutting Russia off from SWIFT would
almost certainly be followed by long-term economic and strategic benefits for
Moscow.
We
know this because every attempt to "sanction" Russia has had a
similar result.
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