Friday, April 19

What is SWIFT banking system? How a Russia sanction could use it


President Joe Biden unveiled new sanctions against Russia on Thursday in response to President Vladimir Putin’s decision to invade Ukraine, and said that collectively, they will be “more consequential” than one of the strongest single options he could seek.

Biden stopped short of announcing the U.S. and its allies would impose a harsh financial penalty against Russia — kicking it out of the SWIFT banking system — but said such action may still be on the table as the crisis unfolds.

“It is always an option,” Biden told reporters at the White House, “but right now it’s not the position that the rest of Europe wishes to take.”

If and when that were to happen, doing so, which some financial analysts have likened to a “nuclear option,” would be an unprecedented move against one of the world’s largest economies.

What is SWIFT?

The Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication, or SWIFT, is a cooperative of financial institutions formed in 1973 and headquartered in Belgium. It is overseen by the National Bank of Belgium in partnership with other major central banks, including the U.S. Federal Reserve System, the Bank of England and the European Central Bank.

But SWIFT is not a traditional bank and does not transfer funds. Rather, it acts as a secure messaging system that links more than 11,000 financial institutions in over 200 countries and territories, alerting banks when transactions are going to occur. (For instance, American banks have a unique SWIFT code that customers use for incoming wire transfers in U.S. dollars.)

In 2021, SWIFT said it recorded an average of 42 million messages per day, an 11 percent increase from the year before. In 2020, Russia accounted for 1.5 percent of transactions.

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What would be the effect on Russia?

For the U.S. and its European allies, cutting Russia out of the SWIFT financial system would be one of the toughest financial steps they could take, damaging Russia’s economy immediately and in the long term. The move could cut Russia off from most international financial transactions, including profits from oil and gas production, which accounts for more than 40 percent of the country’s revenue.

Allies on both sides of the Atlantic also dangled the idea of the SWIFT option in 2014, when Russia annexed Crimea and backed separatist forces in eastern Ukraine. Russia declared then that kicking it out of SWIFT would be equivalent to a declaration of war. But the allies shelved the idea.

Russia since then has tried to develop its own financial transfer system, with limited success.

The U.S. has succeeded before in persuading the SWIFT system to kick out a country — Iran, over its nuclear program. But kicking Russia out of SWIFT would also hurt other economies, including those of the U.S. and key ally Germany.

How likely is Russia to be booted from SWIFT?

Some U.S. lawmakers want the United States to do so immediately, although Biden on Thursday said he preferred to use a raft of new sanctions, which include targeting Russian banks and Putin’s billionaire supporters.

The U.S. Department of the Treasury said all of Russia’s largest financial institutions would be affected, including Sherbank and VTB Bank, and the ability of state-owned and private entities to raise capital would be impeded, cutting off major parts of the Russian financial system and economy from access to the U.S. dollar more broadly. 

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“Treasury is taking serious and unprecedented action to deliver swift and severe consequences to the Kremlin and significantly impair their ability to use the Russian economy and financial system to further their malign activity,” Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said.

To pull Russia’s SWIFT credentials, Biden pointed out that he would still need the support from his counterparts in Europe, who appear to be less gung-ho about such a drastic measure. Russia remains a key energy supplier to Europe.

In a statement issued in 2014 when it last discussed booting Russia, SWIFT said it is a “neutral global cooperative” and that “any decision to impose sanctions on countries or individual entities rests solely with the competent government bodies and applicable legislators.”

But if U.S. allies don’t want to go along with ousting Russia from SWIFT, Biden can act unilaterally by enforcing a move by the Federal Reserve, which clears transactions, to block Russian companies’ access to American dollars. 

House Intelligence Chairman Adam Schiff, D-Calif., expressed support for the severe sanctions announced by Biden, but said on MSNBC that the administration can go further by forcing Russia out of SWIFT.

He added that if European nations don’t agree with harsher financial penalties against Russia and Putin, the U.S. should act unilaterally.

The Associated Press contributed.

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