60 Finance&economics TheEconomistMarch12th 2022
merchants at bay. While Ukraine is “un
reachable”, Russia is “untouchable”, says
Michael Magdovitz of Rabobank.
Most alarming will be the conflict’s im
pact on agriculture worldwide. The region
is a big supplier of critical fertiliser compo
nents, including natural gas and potash.
Fertiliser prices had already doubled or tri
pled, depending on the type, even before
the war, owing to rising energy and trans
port costs and sanctions imposed in 2021
on Belarus, which produces 18% of the
world’s potash, as it cracked down on dissi
dents. As Russia, which accounts for 20%
of global output, finds it harder to export
its own potash, prices are sure to rise fur
ther. Since fourfifths of the world’s potash
is traded internationally, the impact of
price spikes will be felt in every agricultur
al region in the world, warns Humphrey
Knight of cru, a consultancy.
As a result of all this, a much greater
share of incomes will soon be spent on
food (see chart). This will be felt most
acutely in the Middle East, Africa and parts
of Asia, where some 800m people depend
heavily on Black Sea wheat. That includes
Turkey, which supplies much of the south
ern Mediterranean with flour. Egypt usual
ly buys 70% of its wheat from Russia and
Ukraine. The latter alone accounts for half
of Lebanon’s wheat imports. Many others
can hardly do without Ukraine’s corn,
soyabeans and vegetable oil.
Meanwhile higher fertiliser and energy
costs will crimp farmers’ margins every
where. Brazil, a huge producer of meat and
agricultural products, imports 46% of its
potash from either Russia or Belarus, says
Cristiano Veloso of Verde AgriTech, a Bra
zilian startup. Eventually some of the costs
will be passed on to the consumer.
Protectionism may pour more fuel on
the fire. National restrictions on fertiliser
exports increased last year and could accel
erate. Limits on food exports, or panic
buying by importers, could trigger a price
spike of the kind that sparked riots in doz
ens of countries in 200708. On March 8th
and 9th, respectively, Russia and Ukraine
bannedwheatexports.Argentina,Hunga
ry,IndonesiaandTurkeyhaveannounced
foodexportrestrictionsinrecentdays.
Thereisnoeasyfix.Someofthe160m
tonnesofwheatusedasanimalfeedevery
year could be diverted for human con
sumption,butsubstitutionmayexportin
flationtootherstaples.Increasingproduc
tioninEuropeandAmericaanddrawing
on India’s vast strategic stockpile may
yield1015mtonnes—asubstantialquanti
ty,butlessthana thirdofUkraine’sand
Russia’scombinedannualexports.Some
couldcomefromfartherafieldbutthere
arebottlenecks:effortstoexportmoreof
Australia’s bumper winterwheat crop
havecloggedthesupplychainsbetweenits
farmsandports.Withcorn,governments
mayresortto appropriatingsomeofthe
148mtonnesusedasbioethanol feedto
helpplugthisyear’slikelyshortfallof35m
tonnes.Fertilisershortagesareevenhard
er tocover:newpotashmines take510
yearstobuild.
ThewarinUkraineisalreadya tragedy.
Asitravagestheworld’sbreadbasket,a ca
lamitylooms.n
Steeper staples
Food spend as % of individual income
Sources:Rabobank;World Bank
NorthAmerica
Europe&
CentralAsia
EastAsia& Pacific
MiddleEast&
northAfrica
LatinAmerica
SouthAsia
Sub-SaharanAfrica
403020100
201 2023 forecast
Russia,Chinaandsanctions
Pipe dream
N
ationalist bloggersin China have a
new fascination: global payment sys
tems. Vladimir Putin’s attack on Ukraine,
followed by Western sanctions on Russia,
have prompted internet pundits to extol
the virtues of the CrossBorder Interbank
Payment System (cips), the rails on which
Chinese banks transfer and clear yuande
nominated payments around the world.
Some have also taken to bashing swift, the
Belgiumbased financial messaging sys
tem that has started excluding Russian
banks from international payments.
cips and swift are far from being
household names in China. But the sweep
ing sanctions against Russia—on the use
of swiftby some of its banks and on its
central bank—have shone a spotlight on
China’s homegrown financial networks,
and the extent to which it can use them to
help Russia. Three primary Chinese finan
cial channels are in place to assist—two le
gitimate, one not. None is a remotely ade
quate substitute for the links to the West
ern financial system that Russia has lost.
First, consider the direct connections
between the two countries’ central banks,
which do not require swiftmessaging to
make transactions. Russia has about
$90bnworth of mainly yuandenominat
ed deposits held with the Chinese central
bank. It also has a 150bnyuan swapline
agreement with China. It can use these
funds to finance imports from China in the
event that other tradefinance routes in
dollars are blocked, note analysts at Natix
is, an investment bank.
But this trade will largely remain in
yuan, limiting what Russia can purchase.
China’s regulators are still keen to avoid
American “secondary” sanctions. Primary
sanctions target Russian institutions and
American firms that deal with them. The
secondary sort have yet to be used, but
would target third parties outside America
that interact with Russian firms, even if
those transactions are permitted by local
law. Allowing Russia to sell yuandenomi
nated assets in order to raise dollars could
attract scrutiny and go beyond what Chi
nese officials are willing to do for their
friends in Moscow.
Next, there are the several complex and
widespread financial networks China has
spent decades building. Take, for example,
the web of stateowned banks that have
cropped up in commercial hubs around
the world. China’s banking regulator may
have stated on March 2nd that the country
would not join Western sanctions, but
most of its big banks will adhere to them,
particularly those that interact most with
the Western financial system and have le
gal entities that are domiciled in America.
These large institutions, which conduct
the bulk of trade finance between the two
countries, are unlikely to risk getting
blocked from dollar clearing in order to
continue doing dollardenominated busi
ness with Russia. Maintaining full access
to global financial markets is “more valu
able than anything Russia can offer”, ac
cording to Neil Shearing of Capital Eco
nomics, a consultancy.
UnionPay, China’s stateowned bank
Chinese financial plumbing is not the
answer to Russia’s problems
Don’t tell me your pipes are blocked too