Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-l7hp2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-28T10:24:58.416Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Impact of Western Sanctions on Putin's War

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2022

Olga V. Chyzh*
Affiliation:
Department of Political Science, University of Toronto, Sidney Smith Hall, Room 3018, 100 St. George Street, Toronto, ON M5S 3G3, Canada
*
Corresponding author. Email: [email protected].
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

In response to Putin's invasion of Ukraine, the West imposed a package of unprecedented sanctions that has failed to generate meaningful domestic backlash against Putin's war. Leveraging extant research on the survival of authoritarian regimes under economic sanctions, I show that their devastating economic costs notwithstanding, sanctions are unlikely to destabilize Putin's regime or pressure him to withdraw his troops from Ukraine. The key to explaining this outcome is to zero in on the incentive structure of the groups of individuals that make up Putin's inner circle.

Type
Currents/Questions d’actualité
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2022. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of the Canadian Political Science Association (l’Association canadienne de science politique) and/et la Société québécoise de science politique

As the first Russian missiles hit Ukrainian cities on February 24, 2022, Western states punched back with an unprecedented package of sanctions that Russia's President Vladimir Putin described as a “declaration of war” (Schwirtz et al., Reference Schwirtz, Kramer and Levenson2022). Along with the Russian Central Bank and other financial institutions, the measures included asset freezes and travel bans on “individuals and their relatives who directly benefit from their connections with the Kremlin” (The White House, 2022).

Beyond their punitive nature, the sanctions’ stated goal is “to cripple the Russian economy and starve Putin's war machine” (Truss, Reference Truss2022). The deliberate targeting of Putin's inner circle, however, led some observers to suggest that sanctions may “entice” Russia's elites to influence their leader to call off the invasion or even topple the regime (for example, Leon, Reference Leon2022).

But as the world enjoyed the spectacle of seized super-yachts and mountain châteaux, Russian troops continued making inroads and attacking Ukrainian cities. Only a few of the sanctioned individuals expressed their rather reserved disapproval of the war—hardly the uproar for which the West might have hoped. Why do Russian oligarchs stay silent even as their assets and fortunes dwindle?

The central finding in the academic literature is that leader survival under sanctions depends on the domestic context in which the leader operates (Escribà-Folch and Wright, Reference Escribà-Folch and Wright2010; Lektzian and Souva, Reference Lektzian and Souva2007). The crux of the argument is that every leader faces a domestic selectorate—a group of people who have a say (through vote or other types of influence) over whether the current leader stays in office or is replaced with a more preferred alternative. In order to stay in power, a leader must maintain support of some critical mass of that selectorate, known as the winning coalition (Bueno de Mesquita et al., Reference de Mesquita, Alastair Smith, Siverson and Morrow2005).

Whereas the selectorate of a democratic leader includes all the voting-eligible population, the selectorate of an authoritarian leader, such as Putin, is limited to a small number of elites that make up the leader's inner circle. Either way, a leader maintains the support of the winning coalition by distributing rents—in the form of material wealth or policy. As long as a leader is able to guarantee their preferred distribution of rents, the members of the leader's winning coalition will stand by them. Understanding the potential effects of Western sanctions on Putin's decision making, as well as his short- and long-term survival in office, requires zeroing in on the members of his inner circle and the ways the latest sanctions affect their preferences.

Lumped together as “Russian oligarchs” in the Western media narrative, the sanctioned individuals are not a monolithic group. These individuals vary in the degree of their access to the Russian leader and in political influence over his decisions (Stanovaya, Reference Stanovaya2020). For the purposes of this analysis, the sanctioned individuals may be roughly classified into two relevant categories: the state-oligarchs and the strongmen.Footnote 1 I will highlight the functional differences between these two categories to show that neither has an incentive to pressure Putin to end the war in Ukraine. Moreover, neither group has an incentive to topple the regime, albeit for different reasons.

The individuals in the first category—the state-oligarchs—derived their immense wealth from privatization of the state-owned enterprises in the 1990s (for example, Igor Sechin of Rosneft, Andrei Kostin of VTB Bank). Contrary to a common misperception in the West, Russian state-oligarchs today do not have the political cachet they did in the 1990s and early 2000s. Upon his rise to power, Putin drastically reformed the relationship between the oligarchs and the state. Today's state-oligarchs in Russia manage, rather than control, various industries of the Russian economy (Stanovaya, Reference Stanovaya2020).

The state-oligarchs’ position in today's Russian society is rather precarious, as it is entirely conditional on remaining within Putin's favour. Practically all assets they manage can only operate with the state's permission, with Putin as the final arbiter. State-oligarchs’ wealth and position are solely legitimized by the current regime through their personal connections to Putin—an asset they cannot pass on to their offspring or transfer beyond Putin's regime (Lamberova and Sonin, Reference Lamberova, Sonin and Treisman2018; Stanovaya, Reference Stanovaya2020).

Putin has also made it very clear to the state-oligarchs that their material wealth does not translate into political influence. Those that tried to test the system have paid a steep price (Stanovaya, Reference Stanovaya2020; Lamberova and Sonin, Reference Lamberova, Sonin and Treisman2018). For example, the former media magnate Vladimir Gusinsky, whose TV channel, NTV, led an investigation into a Federal Security Service (FSB) connection to the 1999 apartment bombings in Russian cities—a precursor to, and the Kremlin's justification for, the Second Chechen War—faced accusations of corruption, multiple arrests, and ultimately, a forced exile (Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 2011; Roxburgh, Reference Roxburgh2011; Hoffman, Reference Hoffman2003).

Putin's continued support and continuation in power guarantee the social status, wealth and personal safety of the state-oligarchs. As long as they keep out of politics, they are able to maintain their assets in Russia. Moreover, they can continue using their connection to Putin as currency, essentially selling insurance (from government regulation or business competitors) to their less connected business partners. Should they speak up against the war or the regime, they not only risk losing their remaining wealth but may also face criminal charges and prosecution. However disappointed they are to lose their Western assets, the state-oligarchs have even more to lose if they do not keep their heads down and their mouths shut. The latest sanctions may decrease the size of the pie—the amount of wealth that Putin can distribute to the state-oligarchs—but the pie is still very large. Moreover, for the oligarchs who can shift production to import substitution, sanctions may actually increase domestic rents, as import restrictions drive up the prices and profits of the domestically produced goods (Lektzian and Souva, Reference Lektzian and Souva2007). While the state-oligarchs are well positioned to take advantage of these windfalls under the current regime, a different leader could revise the distribution in favour of their own inner circle. The threat of a revision to their preferred (economic) status quo forces the state-oligarchs to stay quiet.

The second group, the strongmen, consists of Putin's St. Petersburg connections: those who helped him rise to power and whom he repaid with appointments to key government and other power positions (for example, Nikolai Patrushev of the Security Council, Sergei Naryshkin of the Foreign Intelligence Service). Middle managers and criminal thugs turned ministers and heads of research institutes, these individuals are Putin's most loyal supporters. Unlike the state-oligarchs, the strongmen do hold political influence (Soldatov and Rochlitz, Reference Soldatov, Rochlitz and Treisman2018; Stanovaya, Reference Stanovaya2020). Putin's continuation in power is predicated on their continued support and the support of the key military and defence structures they control. Rather than buy them off with material wealth, Putin secures their support by aligning Russia's domestic and foreign policies with this group's ideal point, which also closely matches his own.

This group, on balance, is ideologically conservative and hostile toward the West. In contrast to the state-oligarchs’ concern with (mostly their own) economic prosperity and material wealth, strongmen focus on Russia's role in the global security structure and what they perceive as the “unfair” rules of the game brought about by the fall of the Soviet Union (Putin, Reference Putin2007). As a result, the strongmen are generally unconcerned with Western sanctions: even those with foreign assets view economics as a tool of the state. If anything, strongmen view Russia's looming economic isolation, as well as the forced return of the state-oligarchs to Russia, as a benefit. Autarky and isolation facilitate repression and further strengthen their status vis-à-vis the state-oligarchs and other domestic rivals. As evidence of the hardening of the Russian regime are notable increases in police brutality against anti-war protesters and a crackdown against the few remaining independent media outlets and Western social media platforms (Stelter and Golodryga, Reference Stelter and Golodryga2022; BBC News, 2022; Sauer, Reference Sauer2022). The strongmen welcome these changes—the security agencies they control ensure their enforcement. As long as Putin helps fulfill their dream of a ruthless police state, the strongmen will rally behind him.

The above description is, of course, a simplified sketch of the power dynamics in today's Russia. It zeroes in on the groups of actors with the most direct access to Putin—his winning coalition—and leaves out other groups whose power is limited to other realms (for example, technocrats delegated with day-to-day arbitration among various power groups). By painting the ideal types, the above description also downplays within-type variation—for example, the generational differences among strongmen.

For understanding the effect of sanctions on Putin's regime, the focus on ideal types highlights two core insights: (1) neither of the core groups within Putin's inner circle has an incentive to pressure Putin to stop the war, and (2) both groups have a continued preference for supporting the regime. The latest sanctions fail to compromise Putin's ability to distribute rents to his core supporters and hence are unlikely to lead to the toppling of his regime.

The results of the analysis fit with the broader research on the effects of economic sanctions on regime stability. Just as we see in the case of Putin's Russia, research shows a strong association between sanctions and domestic repression, especially in authoritarian regimes (Wood, Reference Wood2008). The link between sanctions and regime stability is known to be conditioned by domestic institutions: sanctions destabilize democratic leaders but have little to no effect on authoritarian regimes (Lektzian and Souva, Reference Lektzian and Souva2007). Within autocratic regimes, sanctions are most effective at destabilizing personalist regimesFootnote 2 and monarchies but have no systematic effects on single-party or military regimes (Escribà-Folch and Wright, Reference Escribà-Folch and Wright2010). While the current regime in Russia is not strictly a military one, much of Putin's authority derives from his growing reliance on the intelligence apparatus, security, and other power structures. At the same time, the regime's increasing reliance on career technocrats for arbitration (Stanovaya, Reference Stanovaya2020) and on state-oligarchs for economic decision making parallels other single-party regimes.

While limited in their immediate effects, the sanctions have nontrivial long-term payoffs: the weakening of Russia's economy and, with it, its military power. It is only a matter of time before the Russian state can no longer fulfill its massive entitlements and pay its employees—not only doctors, teachers and administrators but also the police and the military-industrial complex. And the sanctions on the state-oligarchs’ wealth are an essential tool in achieving this goal, as they limit the Kremlin's ability to draw on this wealth for stopgap funding. Whether Russia's economy—and with it, its military might—can endure weeks or months of sanctions depends on how Russia plays its remaining cards, including co-operation with China and leveraging its comparative and absolute advantages in agricultural resources (for example, wheat and corn) and natural resources (for example, rare earth minerals, oil and gas).

The long-term sanctions’ success also depends, in no small part, on the West's ability and commitment to withstand their own costs of imposing the sanctions. This means finding alternative energy sources that would alleviate Europe's dependence and vulnerability to Russia's energy blackmail. Russia's invasion of Ukraine unified the United States and its allies more than any other event since the end of the Cold War, but this moment of unity might be fleeting. After all, energy concerns quickly unravelled previous rounds of sanctions against Russia (for example, those in response to its 2014 invasion of Crimea). The United States and its partners must act swiftly to devise practical ways to support one another before this monolithic front starts showing cracks.

Footnotes

1 The sanctions list also includes other wealthy individuals, who are excluded from this analysis, due to their lack of direct access to Putin (that is, these are not a part of his winning coalition).

2 Personalist regimes, according to this literature, are characterized by weak institutions (both military and the party system). Leaders of these regimes remain in power by distributing rents (often from exports of primary products, such as coffee or cocoa) to their patronage networks—for example, Idi Amin of Uganda (Escribà-Folch and Wright, Reference Escribà-Folch and Wright2010).

References

BBC News. 2022. “Protests across Russia See Thousands Detained.” March 6. https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-60640204 (March 23, 2022).Google Scholar
de Mesquita, Bueno, Alastair Smith, Bruce, Siverson, Randolph M. and Morrow, James D.. 2005. The Logic of Political Survival. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.Google Scholar
Escribà-Folch, Abel and Wright, Joseph. 2010. “Dealing with Tyranny: International Sanctions and the Survival of Authoritarian Rulers.” International Studies Quarterly 54 (2): 335–59.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hoffman, David E. 2003. “The Oligarchs: Wealth and Power in the New Russia.” New York: Public Affairs.Google Scholar
Lamberova, Natalia and Sonin, Kostantin. 2018. “The Role of Business in Shaping Economic Policy.” In The New Autocracy: Information, Politics, and Policy in Putin's Russia, ed. Treisman, Daniel. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press.Google Scholar
Lektzian, David and Souva, Mark. 2007. “An Institutional Theory of Sanctions Onset and Success.” Journal of Conflict Resolution 51 (6): 848–71.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Leon, Aron. 2022. “Putin Needs to Watch His Back.” Washington Post, March 7. https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2022/03/07/why-putin-must-beware-of-coup-threats/ (March 14, 2022).Google Scholar
Putin, Vladimir. 2007. “Speech and the Following Discussion at the Munich Conference on Security Policy.” February 10. Munich, Germany. https://russialist.org/transcript-putin-speech-and-the-following-discussion-at-the-munich-conference-on-security-policy/ (April 4, 2022)Google Scholar
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. 2011. “Ten Years Ago, Russia's Independent NTV, The Talk of the Nation, Fell Silent.” April 14. https://www.rferl.org/a/russia_independent_ntv_fell_silent/3557594.html (March 23, 2022).Google Scholar
Roxburgh, Angus. 2011. The Strongman: Vladimir Putin and the Struggle for Russia. London, United Kingdom: Bloomsbury.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sauer, Pjotr. 2022. “Russia Bans Facebook and Instagram under ‘Extremism’ Law.” Guardian, March 21. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2022/mar/21/russia-bans-facebook-and-instagram-under-extremism-law (March 23, 2022).Google Scholar
Schwirtz, Michael, Kramer, Andrew E. and Levenson, Michael. 2022. “Russian Forces Pound Civilians, as Putin Likens Sanctions to a ‘Declaration of War.’” New York Times, March 5. https://www.nytimes.com/2022/03/05/world/europe/ukraine-russia-putin.html (March 9, 2022).Google Scholar
Soldatov, Andrei and Rochlitz, Michael. 2018. “The Siloviki in Russian Politics.” In The New Autocracy: Information, Politics, and Policy in Putin's Russia, ed. Treisman, Daniel. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press.Google Scholar
Stanovaya, Tatiana. 2020. “The Putin Regime Cracks.” Carnegie Moscow Center, May 7. https://carnegiemoscow.org/2020/05/07/putin-regime-cracks-pub-81726 (March 14, 2022).Google Scholar
Stelter, Brian and Golodryga, Bianna. 2022. “Journalists from Russia's Last Independent News Network Are Fleeing the Country.” CNN Business, March 3. https://www.cnn.com/2022/03/02/media/journalism-crackdown-russia/index.html (March 23, 2022).Google Scholar
The White House. 2022. “Fact Sheet: United States Imposes First Tranche of Swift and Severe Costs on Russia.” Briefing Room, Statement and Releases, February 22. https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2022/02/22/fact-sheet-united-states-imposes-first-tranche-of-swift-and-severe-costs-on-russia/ (March 11, 2022).Google Scholar
Truss, Elizabeth. 2022. “Government Announces Sanctions against Russian Oligarchs Alisher Usmanov and Igor Shuvalov.” Press release. United Kingdom Office of the Press Secretary. https://www.gov.uk/government/news/government-announces-sanctions-against-russian-oligarchs-alisher-usmanov-and-igor-shuvalov (March 11, 2022).Google Scholar
Wood, Reed M. 2008. “A Hand upon the Throat of the Nation: Economic Sanctions and State Repression, 1976–2001.” International Studies Quarterly 52 (3): 489513.CrossRefGoogle Scholar