VoxTalks Economics

S9 Ep17: Sanctions and financial repression

Mar 6, 2026
Oleg Itskhoki, Harvard economist known for work on exchange rates and capital flows, discusses how financial repression works and why governments use it. He recounts Russia’s 2022 measures like forced currency conversion and withdrawal limits. He examines when such tools can halt crises, the political difficulty of reversing them, and the risk they pose as a long-term alternative to fiscal reform.
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INSIGHT

What Financial Repression Actually Is

  • Financial repression is any government intervention that distorts private domestic financial decisions.
  • It ranges from forcing banks to hold cheap government debt to banning foreign-currency savings and restricting withdrawals, altering savings and investment channels.
ANECDOTE

How Russia Used Repression To Stabilize The Ruble

  • Russia deployed many repression tools in 2022 and stopped a rapid ruble collapse.
  • Measures included taxing dollar purchases, forcing exporters to surrender FX revenues, and banning bank cash withdrawals for weeks.
INSIGHT

Success Depended On Continued Export Revenues

  • The repression measures worked largely because export FX continued flowing into Russia.
  • Swift imposition and short duration (a few weeks) meant long-run costs didn't materialize because exports kept funding the system.
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