Payment System thru Swift to Russia under
Threat
The European Union is being
criticized for not cutting off Russia from the global payments system. But what
exactly is SWIFT? What would a ban mean for Russia? And why is the EU dragging
its feet? DW explains.
Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba didn't mince his words in calling out the European
Union for dragging its feet on shutting Russia out of SWIFT.
"Everyone who now doubts whether Russia should be banned from SWIFT
has to understand that the blood of innocent Ukrainian men, women and children
will be on their hands too," Kuleba wrote on
Twitter.
Many others, including several leaders from within the EU, shared Kuleba's sentiment that Russia should be cut off from the
international payments system in response to President
Vladimir Putin's war against Ukraine.
What is SWIFT?
SWIFT, or the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial
Telecommunication, is a secure global messaging network that banks use to make
cross-border payments. The network facilitates financial institutions to wire
money to each other, helping ensure that global trade carries on smoothly.
It is used by more than 11,000 financial institutions in over 200
countries and territories to send secure payment orders. Nearly 40 million
messages with instructions to transfer trillions of dollars were sent each day
in 2020 over the platform, making it the most important payment messaging network
in the world, by far.
Because the messages sent over the platform are deemed secure, it helps
banks honor the payment instructions swiftly. This ensures that financial
institutions can handle high volumes of transactions every day.
The Belgium-based society, founded in 1973, is overseen by central banks
in Europe, the United States, Canada and Japan.
What would a Ban mean for Russia?
Cutting off Russia from the network would cause a major disruption to
its economy as it would severely restrict the country's access to global
financial markets.
The ban would make it difficult for Russian firms and individuals to pay
for imported goods or receive payments for their exports, dealing a major blow
to the country's crucial oil and gas sector, which relies heavily on SWIFT for
the movement of funds. It would also restrict Russians' ability to invest or
borrow overseas.
The booting of Iranian banks from the network in 2012 was partly
responsible for a dramatic drop in the country's oil exports.
Russian financial institutions could use other channels such as phones,
messaging apps or email as alternatives and process payments via banks in
countries that have not imposed sanctions. But these alternatives would not be
as efficient and secure as SWIFT and could lead to higher costs and a fall in
transaction volumes.
Russia has developed its own payment messaging network, called SPFS. The
system, which handles about a fifth of domestic payments, underwhelms when it
comes to the scale and efficiency that SWIFT offers.
Why is the EU Holding Back?
The EU economy
is more intertwined with Russia's than the US economy is and stands to lose much
more if Moscow were to be shut out of SWIFT.
Data from the Bank of International Settlements (BIS) shows that EU
banks hold a major chunk of the nearly $30 billion (€27 billion) in foreign
banks' exposure to Russia.
The European Union is Russia's biggest trade partner. About 37% of
Russia's imports came from the EU in 2020 and nearly 38% of its exports went to
the EU. The bloc
relies heavily on Russia for its energy needs and gets more than a third of
its gas supply and about a quarter of its oil from the country.
"[A SWIFT ban] is also going to be very bad for Europe because, if
they can't pay for Russian gas, using correspondent banks that use dollars in
the middle of the transaction of buying their oil and gas from Russia, it's
going to create havoc on the gas markets and possibly result in having gas
turned off in winter," Alexandra Vacroux,
executive director of the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies at Harvard
University, told DW.
Some EU leaders, including German Chancellor Olaf Scholz,
have justified their inaction on the SWIFT ban by suggesting that they were
holding back some ammunition for later.
Is SWIFT Bound by Sanctions?
The society, a cooperative of banks, describes itself as politically
neutral and has resisted calls to boot countries from the network. However,
SWIFT, which is incorporated under Belgian law, is bound by Belgian and EU
rules, which would include economic sanctions.
Gottfried Leibbrandt, former head of SWIFT,
told a Financial Times forum in 2021 that, although the network is
technically independent, the United States enjoys effective sanction powers, as
over 40% of payment flows are in US dollars.
In the past, Washington has
had countries banned from SWIFT, including as recently as 2018, when Iranian banks
were banned after the US withdrew from the Iran nuclear deal.