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Economic Sanctions as A Tool of US Hegemony | Current Affairs | Vision IAS
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Economic Sanctions as A Tool of US Hegemony

Posted 11 Aug 2025

2 min read

A working paper by Dr. Urjit Patel (former governor of RBI) recognises that using economic coercion to achieve geopolitical goals has been a longstanding American policy and is only expanding under the Trump Presidency. 

  • Over the years, the US has sanctioned oil exports from Venezuela, Iran, Iraq, Libya, Sudan, and Syria.

Key Highlights of the Paper

  • Sanctions as a Tool of Economic Warfare:  Economic sanctions – curbs on trade and shipping, banking, payments channels, etc. are a substitute for military war for lining up the diplomatic agendas.
  • Rise in number yet limited effectiveness: Despite a deluge of sanctions in the 21st century, sanctions have been largely ineffective in achieving the diplomatic objectives of sanctioners. 
    • Of 687 sanctions since 2000, fewer than 20% achieved complete success.
  • Rise of Secondary Sanctions: They are extraterritorial, imposed to impede the economic activity of third countries not directly violating primary sanctions. 
    • The US and allies (G7, EU) use secondary sanctions to block third-party trade with sanctioned countries. Key Examples are 
      • Chabahar Port (Iran): Indian investment hit by US sanctions.
      • Oil Investments in Russia: Indian PSUs unable to access $900 million in dividends due to US/EU payment restrictions.
Infographic showing factors on which effectiveness of US sanctions is based

India should view the emerging international financial architecture around BRICS and the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB) as a “risk mitigant” and a rational response to the ever-expanding sanctions regime. 

  • Tags :
  • US Hegemony
  • Economic coercion
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