What is the SWIFT and why is it so important as a financial weapon?

in Project HOPE2 years ago (edited)

At the time of writing this article, six days of the military confrontation between Russia and its neighboring country Ukraine have passed, the number of casualties of both armies is counted in the thousands, while the intense bombing of the main Ukrainian cities, takes a terrifying number every time. largest civilian Billions of dollars, invested in weapons, used to destroy buildings, facilities, and lives, which would take many years to recover and return to what it was before.

War, whatever its justification, only leaves behind a trail of death, destruction, and desolation. There are no winners in any armed conflict, nothing is as ridiculously perverse as trying to build something from the ashes of death and devastation.

imagen taken from yahoo! finance

As part of the pressure mechanisms of the international community to force the Russian government to cease its efforts to invade Ukraine, the exclusion of Russia from the international interbank communication system known as SWIFT has been requested, which is why on this occasion I would like us to know a little about the operation of this financial communication mechanism and how said exclusion could affect, not only the Russian economy but also the world economy.

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What is the Society for World Interbank Financial Telecommunication (SWIFT)?

SWIFT is an interbank messaging system that allows financial transactions to be carried out between the different banks in the world. This system provides a secure means of information between banks that allows the execution of financial exchanges between the different banks of the countries of the world, as well as foreign exchange operations.

Founded in 1973, this global financial communication channel connects more than 11,000 banks in more than 200 countries around the world, is headquartered in Belgium, and is governed by EU law. The SWIFT, as an organization, is currently jointly owned by more than 2,000 banks and financial institutions in the world and was created by American and European banks, who did not want a single institution to develop its system and create a monopoly in the system of financial exchanges. global.

The organization is supervised by the National Bank of Belgium, together with the main central banks of the world, which of course includes the US Federal Reserve and the Bank of England, among others.

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How does SWIFT work?

Suppose we wanted to pay a supplier in Europe for the acquisition of certain merchandise that we wish to import to America. Our money, deposited in dollars in an American bank, needs to “arrive” in euros at the bank account of our European supplier. make this possible?: using the SWITF system.

All banks in the world, to communicate and understand each other, adopted this interbank communication standard called SWIFT. To understand it thoroughly, SWIFT would be a kind of "language" that allows banks to understand each other. A SWIFT message contains, for example, information on the identity of the person making a payment and the beneficiary, as well as the corresponding account numbers, so that any transfer and exchange of funds can be completed.

imagen taken from Trendsmap

It must be clear that SWIFT messages are only used for communication between banks, that is, they describe the characteristics of the operation to be carried out, however, each bank, according to said information received, is responsible for settling or processing independently, each financial operation that is requested of them. It is estimated that around 42 million of these SWIFT messages are sent and received daily.

The main reason why SWIFT is often known is because of the bank codes, which are the ones used to make or receive an international transfer if the bank is a member of SWIFT. Each bank has an international ISO 9632 code that identifies it in the system. The SWIFT code of a bank is made up of the country code, the bank code, and a series of additional data, such as the location or type of branch.

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How would the expulsion of Russia from the SWIFT system be carried out? How would this measure affect the Russian economy and the world economy? Why is it considered a kind of financial “nuclear bomb”? We will be developing these questions and their answers in the next article in this series, if you want to comment or add more information about such an interesting topic, I invite you to chat in the comment box.

We keep reading!

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Hello @karupanocitizen, I already want to see the next post in this series, I am interested in knowing the immediate effects on the economy in Russia and the development of the war, as well as the possible collateral effects at the international level in relation to the exclusion of Russia from the swift system.

Excellent post.

Thank you very much @tocho2 for your kind comment, the issue of the Russian-Ukrainian war is something that has the world on edge due to the possibility, even very remote, that it could escalate to something much worse.

Greetings friend @karupanocitizen.

It is always very nice to read your articles, full of very useful and very organized information.

Regarding the topic I think these sanctions do not affect the government, they previously gave statements about cryptocurrencies, I think with the purpose of mining out of the country knowing the conflict that was coming, so these sanctions are only affecting the general population of Russia, destroying their purchasing power as their currency is affected.

 2 years ago 

hi @karupanocitizen

Thank you for sharing link to this publication with me.

I myself am not really convinced if introducing SWIFT sanctions is a way to go.

Sanctions didn't "break" goverment of Iran, Venezuela or neither North Korea. It only made things worse for regular people. And implementing sanctions which target common people should be as illegal as shooting to them and killing them.
After all, Putin will still carry on with his war. But thousands of common Russians will die because of economic consequences.

Biggest irony is, that as far as I'm aware - european countries are still buying oil and gas from Russia. While revenue from that trade is directly the one used by Russian governing party.


I was wondering if you have any view on futute of Russia financial system (especially from the perpective or regular people) after interest rates has been hiked to 20%?

I can hardly imagine being able to pay any loans or morgage in similar situation. Especially while knowing, that all imported items will cost so much more since value of Rubel dropped so badly.

Any thoughts you like to share?

Cheers, Piotr

As a friend @crypto.piotr comments, financial sanctions, although they have been able to slow down the actions of many tyrannies, in the end they have proven ineffective in fulfilling their mission, fundamentally because there are always methods, mostly illegal, to continue financing.

In the end, formal financial sanctions end up affecting not the government but the population, adding even more calamities to it.

I plan to develop another publication focused precisely on the economic effects of this war, of which I believe that the Russian population will be one of the most affected. Best regards and thank you very much for sharing your opinion and comments in my publication

 2 years ago 

I plan to develop another publication focused precisely on the economic effects of this war, of which I believe that the Russian population will be one of the most affected.

I would love to read that post
share link with me once you publish it

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