Sanctions against Russia: a new financial and economic reality?
https://doi.org/10.46272/2409-3416-2022-10-4-65-76
Abstract
Every conflict sooner or later ends in peace. This is the conventional wisdom that can often be heard from those who, in the current “tsunami” of sanctions and confrontation with the West, try to find hope for a return to “normality”. For the most part, sanctions against Russia will not be lifted even if there is a ceasefire in Ukraine and the conflict is resolved. There will be no return to “pre-February normality”. Instead of remembering the lost past, the focus will have to be on creating a new future in which sanctions imposed by the West will remain a constant variable.
About the Author
I. N. TimofeevRussian Federation
Ivan N. Timofeev, PhD (Politics), Program Director, Russian International Affairs Council; Program Director at the Valdai Discussion Club; Associate Professor of the Department of Political Theory, MGIMO University
119454, Russia, Moscow, Vernadskogo Ave., 76
References
1. Hufbauer, Gary Clyde, Jeffrey J. Schott, Kimberly Ann Elliott and Barbara Oegg. Economic Sanctiosn
2. Reconsidred, 3rd Ed. Peterson Institute for International Economics, 2009.
Review
For citations:
Timofeev I.N. Sanctions against Russia: a new financial and economic reality? Cuadernos Iberoamericanos. 2022;10(4):65-76. (In Esp.) https://doi.org/10.46272/2409-3416-2022-10-4-65-76