58 Business TheEconomistMarch19th 2022
The last lot are the remainers.
Nearly 400 Western firms have an
nounced plans to suspend or scale back
their operations in Russia since Mr Putin
attacked Ukraine, according to a tally by
Jeffrey Sonnenfeld of the Yale School of
Management. Some of them, such as bp, a
British energy giant and Russia’s biggest
foreign investor, pulled out early and with
seemingly little hesitation. Others did so
more reluctantly. Citigroup, an American
bank with nearly $10bn of exposure to Rus
sia, had previously said that it was assess
ing its operations in the country, including
its consumer business. But on March 14th
the bank, which has been in the country
since 1992, said it would “expand the
scope” of its withdrawal and stop seeking
new business or clients.
Russians living in big cities, where the
bulk of Western firms’ retail operations are
located, will suffer the most from such clo
sures. But the pain will be felt throughout
Russia’s vast landmass. An analysis by The
Economistof data provided by SafeGraph, a
geolocationinformation firm, shows that
the shutdown of Western businesses will
affect at least 3,500 retail outlets in 480 cit
ies across the country. This includes 1,200
restaurants and cafés, 700 clothing stores,
500 shoe shops and 400 petrol stations.
Muscovites will suffer around 1,000 shop
closures; residents of St Petersburg will
face more than 300 (see map).
Critics of Western firms’ voluntary
withdrawals say that these could radicalise
the middle class and anger traditionally
proWestern young Russians. That could
solidify Mr Putin’s regime rather than top
ple it, they argue. Mr Harms, who used to
live in Moscow, disagrees. The middle
class understands that the exodus is aimed
at the regime rather than the population at
large, he thinks.
Moreover, Westernstyle consumer
goods will remain available in Russia. Safe
Graph’s data show that Russians shopping
for Nike trainers won’t have far to go to find
an alternative pair at one of Reebok’s
stores, which are operating as normal. The
median distance between the rival Ameri
can sportswear brands’ outlets is 0.8km. If
Big Mac lovers are prepared to accept the
Whopper as a substitute, they can typically
find an open Burger King within 0.6km of a
closed McDonald’s. Burger King’s owner,
Restaurant Brands International, has sus
pended support for its Russian franchisees
but many of their outlets remain open. The
same goes for some other Western brands.
The big question is what will happen to
the firms that have pulled back from Rus
sia. Russian prosecutors have reportedly
been threatening to arrest corporate execu
tives who criticise the government and to
seize the assets of companies that with
draw from the country. A senior member of
Mr Putin’s United Russia party mooted a
plan to nationalise the operations of de
parting Western companies, arguing it
would help prevent job losses and main
tain Russia’s domestic productive capacity.
Mr Putin has endorsed the plan.
Some companies that are staying put
are, by contrast, apparently being courted
by Russian officials. They must weigh
those inducements against accusations of
warprofiteering, which have sprouted all
over Western social media. Olga Podorozh
na, a Metro employee in Ukraine, fiercely
criticised her employer’s decision to stay
in Russia in an emotional post on Linked
In, a social network. Metro reacted with its
own LinkedIn post condemning the war.
But it has not reversed its decision to keep
its Russian shops open.
That is unsurprising. Around 10% of
Metro’s total sales of €25bn ($28bn) are
generated by its 93 supermarkets and
10,000 or so employees in Russia. The 19
Globus hypermarkets with 9,900 Russian
employees accounted for 14% of the
group’s sales last year. They were doing so
well that the company has invested more
than €110m in the Russian market in the
past couple of years. For firms like these,
virtuesignallingismuchharderthanitis
foracompanysuchasCocaCola,which
derivedlessthan2%oflastyear’srevenue
fromRussia.Butthepressuretoheadfor
theexitmountswitheveryindiscriminate
Russian assault on Ukraine and its be
siegedcitizens.Evenfortheremainers,the
reputationalcostofstayingmaysoonbe
cometoohightoignore.n
RUSSIA
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~35
KAZAKHSTAN
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Cars Fashion Groceries
Petrolstations Restaurants Other
Moscow,storeclosures*,March14th222
Closures of Western stores†
Sources: SafeGraph;
The Economist
*Selected Western outlets for
which data are available †All categories
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