Capital Blockade

Capital Blockade

A capital blockade is an economic sanction that limits or prevents investment capital from flowing offshore from a country that may use it for possibly questionable purposes. A country, or group of countries, may impose a capital blockade to hamper the economic growth of the sanctioned country as a measure meant to pressure that country to resolve differences through negotiations. Extraterritorial sanctions, also called secondary sanctions or a secondary boycott, are designed to restrict the economic activity of governments, businesses, and nationals of additional countries. A capital blockade is an economic sanction that limits or prevents investment capital from flowing offshore from a country that may use it for possibly questionable purposes. A country or group of countries may impose a capital blockade to pressure an offending country to resolve differences through negotiations.

A capital blockade limits or prevents investment capital from exiting a country that may use it for possibly questionable purposes.

What Is a Capital Blockade?

A capital blockade is an economic sanction that limits or prevents investment capital from flowing offshore from a country that may use it for possibly questionable purposes.

A capital blockade limits or prevents investment capital from exiting a country that may use it for possibly questionable purposes.
A country or group of countries may impose a capital blockade to pressure an offending country to resolve differences through negotiations.
Sanctions can include travel bans, asset freezes, arms embargoes, capital restraints, foreign aid reductions, and trade restrictions.

Understanding Capital Blockades

A country, or group of countries, may impose a capital blockade to hamper the economic growth of the sanctioned country as a measure meant to pressure that country to resolve differences through negotiations. Such sanctions may be an effective and relatively peaceful way to return the offending country to the bargaining table without the need for escalation to armed conflict.

A capital blockade may be combined with freezing foreign bank accounts that belong to the target country's citizens to add pressure.

Economic sanctions are the withdrawal of customary trade and financial relations for foreign policy and security purposes. They may be comprehensive — prohibiting commercial activity with an entire country — or they may be targeted, blocking the transactions of and with specific businesses, groups, or individuals.

Since the terrorist attacks of 9/11, there has been a shift toward targeted sanctions, which aim to minimize the effects on civilians. Sanctions can take many forms, including travel bans, asset freezes, arms embargoes, capital restraints, foreign aid reductions, and trade restrictions.

Economic Sanctions

Sanctions are generally viewed as a lower-cost, lower-risk, middle course of action between diplomacy and war. Policymakers may consider sanctions as a response to foreign crises where the national interest is minor or where military action is not feasible. Leaders may issue sanctions while they evaluate taking more serious actions.

Usually, economic sanctions prohibit only a home country’s or region’s corporations and citizens from doing business with a blacklisted entity. Extraterritorial sanctions, also called secondary sanctions or a secondary boycott, are designed to restrict the economic activity of governments, businesses, and nationals of additional countries. Many governments consider these sanctions a violation of their sovereignty and international law.

Sanction results vary by case. Sanctions with relatively limited objectives are more likely to succeed than those with major political ambitions. Sanctions may evolve. For example, except for a brief period in the 1980s, the United States has had sanctions on Iran since U.S. hostages were taken in 1979, but the scope and logic of the sanctions have changed.

Most often, the utility of sanctions is more important than whether they achieve their objectives. In some cases, sanctions may be intended just to express censure.

Related terms:

Anti-Boycott Regulations

Anti-boycott regulations prevent customers from withholding their patronage of a business. In the US, this primarily deals with Israeli businesses. read more

Antitrust

Antitrust laws apply to virtually all industries and to every level of business, including manufacturing, transportation, distribution, and marketing. read more

Blacklist

A blacklist is a list of persons, organizations or countries penalized because they are believed to engage in unfavorable or unethical activity. read more

Capital : How It's Used & Main Types

Capital is a financial asset that usually comes with a cost. Here we discuss the four main types of capital: debt, equity, working, and trading. read more

Conditionality

Conditionality refers to conditions attached to the provision of loans, debt relief, or aid. read more

Economic Growth

Economic growth is an increase in an economy's production of goods and services. read more

European Union (EU)

The European Union (EU) is a group of countries that acts as one economic unit in the world economy. Its official currency is the euro. read more

Frozen Account

A frozen account is an account to which no withdrawals or purchases can be made. read more

Nontariff Barrier

A nontariff barrier is a trade restriction–such as a quota, an embargo, or a sanction–that countries use to further their political and economic goals. read more

Offshore

Offshore refers to a location outside of one's national boundaries, either land- or water-based. Learn about offshore banking, corporations, and investing. read more