Background
Economic sanctions are measures restricting trade and finance with the aim to coerce the target state to change its policy to a desired direction. There have been economic sanctions against Russia since the unlawful annexation of Crimea in 2014. However, following Russia's attack on Ukraine in February 2022, the US, EU and UK have decided on and applied an unprecedented and acuumulating package of sanctions against Russia. The 13th sanctions package was decided on in February 2024, on the second anniversary of Russia’s invasion to Ukraine. Russia has responded to the sanctions with its own countermeasures, most of which are associated with energy, ie. crude oil and natural gas.
Economic sanctions
Council on Foreign Relations (2017) defines economic sanctions as "the withdrawal of normal trade and financial relations for foreign and security policy objectives." Hufbauer et al. (1990) add to economic sanctions also the threat of economic sanctions. The literature dealing with economic sanctions excludes economic policy goals from the scope of sanctions, such as, for example, the protection of domestic industry with the help of tariffs. Economic sanctions can also be seen as one part of a wider continuum of political pressure (e.g. Kaempfer & Lowenberg , 2007; Sivonen, 2017).
Although the definition of economic sanctions only includes foreign and security policy goals, in democratic states politics must sufficiently enjoy the support of the citizens. Sanctions may also have goals other than officially or publicly presented goals, such as the domestic political goals mentioned by Smith (1995), especially when the goals are significant and the sanctions are modest.
The impact of economic sanctions on political goals is seen to be caused by economic losses caused by sanctions or the threat of them, which in turn leads to a change in policy in the target state ( Blanchard & Ripsman , 2013, 5). Economic sanctions can coerce either directly (economic losses) or indirectly by leading to internal disunity and government opposition ( Pape , 1997). The most important measure of the effect of economic sanctions is the fall in gross domestic product ( Pape , 1997).
Blanchard & Ripsman (2013, 5) distinguish economic sanctions from economic warfare in that the latter aims to weaken the target state's military capability or warfare capability through, for example, an arms export ban. The measure of the success of economic warfare, on the other hand, is the amount of armaments (Pape , 1997).
Howlett (2023) gives a comprehensive overview of public policy design, including the processes, instruments, policy designers. There are indeed many different kinds of instruments which can be used in a policy design and many ways in which instruments of different types can be combined into a policy mix, an example of which is a sanctions package. Stark et al. (2021) studied public deliberation in an experiment, and found that it provides insight in any case, even if it does not alter the policy decisions, The EU sanctions packages were designed in the middle of a very lively public debate and strong emotions, so this is also an interesting viewpoint, although the policy decisions had to be made in this case under a very intense time pressure.
Scope
The scope of this work is to study the design of economic sanctions that the EU has imposed on Russia since the attack on Ukraine in February 2022. The aim is to study the evaluation of the planned or proposed sanctions on a member state level, and see how the necessary viewpoints and estimates of impacts are being compiled, which actors are involved in the process, and how the national position is being formulated and decided on. The methodology covers an overview on selected key theories on sanctions, with emphasis on sanctions design and ex ante estimation of effectiveness and impacts of sanctions, and as an empirical part, a series of theme-based interviews that include the most essential decision-makers and stakeholders in a member state. This study focuses on Finland as a case of an EU member state.
Research questions
The research questions are: 1) how widely were different stakeholders engaged in evaluating the sanctions, 2) in hindsight, which of the estimates were right and which on the other hand proved to be inaccurate, and were there unforeseen factors or phenomena, 3) how did the decision on the national position take place and which decision-makers were involved and 4) what are the key findings with respect to the sanctions theories found in literature.
Projected outcome
With this work, we expect to provide new findings on the design and ex ante evaluation of sanctions, along with a closer understanding how the preparation and decision-making is carried out in the three levels: society level, member state level and EU level. The member state chosen for this case study is Finland.
References
Blanchard, Jean-Marc. F., & Norrin Ripsman (2013). Economic statecraft and foreign policy: Sanctions, incentives, and target state calculations . Abingdon : Routledege .
Council on Foreign Relations (2017). What Are Economic Sanctions ?, https://www.cfr.org/backgrounder/what-are-economic-sanctions, (June 11, 2019).
Howlett, M. (2023). Designing Public Policies: Principles and Instruments (3rd ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003343431
Hufbauer, Gary Clyde, Jeffrey J Schott & Kimberly A Elliot (1990). Economic sanctions reconsidered: History and current policy (Vol. 1) . Washington: Institute for International Economics.
Kaempfer , William H & Anton D Lowenberg (2007). The political economy of economic sanctions. In T. Sandler & K. Hartley ( Eds .). Handbook of Defense Economics, Vol 2 , 867-911.
Pope, Robert. A. (1997). Why economic sanctions do not work . International security , 22(2), 90-136.
Sivonen, Pekka (2017). On the conditions for the success of Western military coercion and intervention. Science and Weapons , 75, 213-223.
Smith, Alistair (1995). The success and use of economic sanctions. International Interactions , 21(3), 229-245
Stark, A., Thompson, N. K., & Marston, G. (2021). Public deliberation and policy design. Policy Design and Practice, 4(4), 452-464