Try GOLD - Free
Trading with the Enemy
Newsweek
|August 12, 2022
Many Western companies are either stepping back from Russia or leaving altogether. The costs have been high both for business help end the war in Ukraine? and Russia. Will "self-sanctioning"
IMMEDIATELY FOLLOWING RUSSIA'S INVASION of Ukraine on February 24, a relative handful of foreign-based companies announced they would be leaving Russia. Jeffrey Sonnenfeld, a Yale School of Management professor who is tracking the companies that have left and the ones that are staying, estimates the original number at "several dozen."
Since then, as international revulsion at the war has grown, more than 1,000 companies from around the world have disengaged to varying degrees from Russia.
If the moral case against President Vladimir Putin's attack on his neighbor is undeniable, the business arguments for and against pulling out of Russia can be more complicated. For any company, leaving Russia is complex and time-consuming. And the question of what actually constitutes leaving-sell everything? close temporarily?-can get murky. Not to mention expensive: Shell Oil has said its decision to leave joint ventures with Russian state-owned energy giant Gazprom would cut its quarterly profit by $4-5 billion. J.P. Morgan Chase expects to lose around $1 billion from scaling down its Russia operations. McDonald's is looking at a write-off of up to $1.4 billion for its exit.
Will the growing number of businesses departing Russia, due to either official government trade restrictions or via voluntary "self-sanctioning," cause enough pain to end Putin's war in Ukraine? And at what cost to the Russian economy and the world's?
Yale's Sonnenfeld says self-sanctioning is a more potent weapon than government sanctions, despite the increasing use of the latter by the U.S., even before the Ukraine conflict. According to the Treasury Department, after 9/11 sanctions became "a tool of first resort to address a range of threats to the national security, foreign policy, and economy of the United States." (The U.S. currently has 37 sanctions programs in place around the world.)
This story is from the August 12, 2022 edition of Newsweek.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Newsweek
Newsweek US
Trump's Numbers Game
As living costs are seen to rise, the president's approval rating is falling-mirroring backlash against Joe Biden
4 mins
November 28, 2025
Newsweek US
AMERICA'S TOP FINANCIAL ADVISORY FIRMS 2026
FINANCIAL ADVISERS CAN HELP YOU MANAGE YOUR money, plan for retirement and create short- and long-term goals to keep you feeling financially secure for years to come.
4 mins
November 28, 2025
Newsweek US
STRUCK FROM HISTORY
Matthew Macfadyen talks exclusively to Newsweek about bringing a forgotten chapter of America's past to life in Netflix's Death by Lightning
6 mins
November 28, 2025
Newsweek US
GATEN MATARAZZO
AS NETFLIX’S STRANGER THINGS COMES TO AN END, GATEN MATARAZZO, 23, IS focused on soaking in the final moments. “I really want to take it in and enjoy it. I don’t think I'll ever be in something that makes quite as much of an impact the way Stranger Things has.”
1 mins
November 28, 2025
Newsweek US
KING OF REHAB'S NEXT MISSION
He overcame addiction and opened the country's most prestigious treatment center. Now, Richard Taite is taking on America's fentanyl crisis
6 mins
November 28, 2025
Newsweek US
Ultimate Warrior?
The team behind this android expects humanoid robots to be weaponized for military use. A demo at Newsweek’s HQ showed there is still a ways to go
12 mins
November 28, 2025
Newsweek US
TONATIUH
RARELY IN HOLLYWOOD DOES ONE SEE A STAR BORN OVERNIGHT, BUT THAT'S what happened to Tonatiuh with Kiss of the Spider Woman.
1 mins
November 28, 2025
Newsweek US
LEGACY IN MOTION
With the cameras rolling, King Charles celebrates a half-century of work redefining what royal duty means
7 mins
November 28, 2025
Newsweek US
The Shrinking C-Suite
Companies are flattening their org charts—and even the top team is feeling the squeeze
6 mins
November 14, 2025
Newsweek US
ED HELMS
ACTOR ED HELMS LOVES A DEEP DIVE INTO A SNAFU FROM THE PAST. \"I LOVE the hubris, our amazing capacity for ineptitude and terrible decision-making.\" He's turned that obsession into the hit podcast SNAFU, inviting guests to break down some of history's most entertaining bloopers. “The snafu is often not just the initial problem, but it’s [a] sort of scurrying aftermath of people trying to cover their tracks.”
2 mins
November 21, 2025
Translate
Change font size

