Reports of the death of economic ties between Russia and the West are greatly 
exaggerated (Part 1). Gillian Tett, writing in today's Financial Times, 
describes how western investors and bankers are disturbed by the latest and 
most damaging financial sanctions threat against Russia: A resolution by the 
European Parliament last month proposing that the EU exclude Russian banks from 
SWIFT, an important component of the international payments system. 

The weapon has been used against Iranian banks since 2012, and the US and UK 
have been pressing for similar action against Russia in response to its support 
of the Donbass rebellion in east Ukraine. Tett  reports that SWIFT, the 
Brussels-based banking consortium which is the gateway to the global interbank 
payments network, has publicly condemned the resolution. 

The fear within the financial industry is that the move could provoke Russia to 
ally with China and other countries to set up a parallel system to rival SWIFT, 
adversely affecting Western trade and financial interests.

http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/2adebf9c-48c1-11e4-9f63-00144feab7de.html?siteedition=intl#axzz3EtJvqCFx

*       *       *

Reports of the death of economic ties between Russia and the West are greatly 
exaggerated (Part 2). Today's Wall Street Journal reports on Russian president 
Vladimir Putin's reassurances to Western investors that Russia is still very 
much open for business despite sanctions which have encouraged it to pursue 
closer economic relations with China. 

Speaking at an annual international  investment conference in Moscow, Putin 
dismissed business concerns that Russia was moving to institute capital 
controls to protect the ruble or was seeking to stem the growth of the private 
sector since the dissolution of the Soviet Union.

He described the sanctions as “obviously total idiocy on the part of the 
governments that are limiting their own business, hampering its operations, 
lowering its competitiveness."

Other Russian government and business leaders also sought to persuade the 1500 
conference participants that the economy would remain open to foreign 
investment and that proposals for  currency controls circulating within Russia 
wouldn’t be implemented. Anxious Western financiers attending the conference 
were reportedly unmoved by the assurances.

http://online.wsj.com/articles/russian-officials-say-no-plans-for-capital-controls-1412246996?tesla=y&mg=reno64-wsj

(These are each behind a paywall. Write me offlist if you want the text.)
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