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“Insanity,” Albert Einstein observed, “is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results.” If the great physicist could witness the EU’s current sanctions policy, he would likely try to put the bloc’s leaders in straitjackets himself.

Earlier this week, member states approved yet another raft of restrictive measures on Russia – the EU’s 17th (yes, seventeenth) since Vladimir Putin launched his country’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

The announcement – which Ursula von der Leyen said will “keep the pressure high on the Kremlin” – came as EU leaders threatened to impose further “massive” sanctions after Moscow ignored their call for a 30-day ceasefire.

EU media breathlessly echoed politicians’ warnings of Moscow’s imminent, sanctions-induced apocalypse: Politico reported this morning that the EU, Ukraine, and the UK are preparing a “mega package” that could “deliver a knockout blow to the Russian economy”.

The idea that Brussels could suddenly obliterate the Russian economy at the 18th attempt is, to put it mildly, hard to believe.

Why, after more than three years of a war that von der Leyen herself has said is “existential” for Europe, are leaders only considering this option now? (Did they stumble across it while searching for one of the Commission president’s deleted texts?)

The core of the “mega” plan – the essential details of which seem to have been copy-pasted from a US Senator's proposal – involves a 500% tariff on all Russian exports into the EU. This would effectively decouple the bloc from its eastern neighbour.

But would this devastate the Russian economy? Probably not.

According to European Commission data, the EU currently imports around €3 billion worth of Russian goods each month, mostly in the form of pipeline and liquefied natural gas (LNG), oil, and fertilisers. This is less than a tenth of Moscow’s total exports.

By comparison, Russia’s total exports fell by more than 25% from 2022 to 2023 – and the Kremlin’s war economy, plainly, didn’t collapse.

Furthermore, the political and economic risks from such a decoupling mean that the EU could only realistically reduce its imports by around half this amount in the near term: that is, from €3 billion to €1.5 billion per month.

Such a decrease would have an effect roughly equivalent to a drop in the price of oil of a couple of dollars, according to Janis Kluge, a senior associate at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs (SWP): a “significant” problem but hardly a catastrophe for Putin.

As it turns out, the EU’s next sanctions package will likely fall far short of even this proposal.

In a speech delivered on Friday afternoon, von der Leyen said that the next package will include additional listings of Moscow’s “shadow fleet” of oil vessels, a lower oil price cap, sanctions on more Russian banks, and a “ban” on the Nord Stream underwater pipeline between Germany and Russia.

Tariffs – including those in the three-digit range – were not mentioned at all.

Read more.

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Economy News Weekly Roundup

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EU approves 17th round of sanctions on Russia. The new package, agreed by EU ambassadors on Wednesday, includes visa bans and asset freezes for senior Russian political and business officials. It also includes export bans for chemicals used to make weapons, trade restrictions on dozens of companies involved in sanctions circumvention, and listings of almost 200 members of Russia’s “shadow fleet” of oil-exporting vessels that are used to bypass a Western oil price cap. Hungary and Slovakia, the EU’s two most pro-Moscow countries that remain heavily dependent on imports of Russian energy, supported the package due to its relative weakness, EU diplomats said. The approval comes after multiple EU ministers and officials vowed on Tuesday to continue imposing restrictive measures on Moscow to force it to enter into peace negotiations with Kyiv. Read more.

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The United States and China slash levies on each other's goods by 115% for 90 days. Washington's duties on Chinese goods will fall from 145% to 30%, while Beijing's tariffs on American goods will drop from 125% to 10%, US Treasury Scott Bessent told reporters on Monday after meeting with senior Chinese officials in Geneva. "We had very robust discussions. Both sides showed great respect to what was a very positive process," Bessent said. The news comes amid fears that Trump's tariffs on Beijing could lead to billions of dollars' worth of Chinese goods being re-directed and "dumped" on European markets, inflicting further damaging the bloc's long-suffering industries. EU officials welcomed the decision but pledged to continue to seek its own trade deal with the US. Read more.

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