Politics

The Sanctions Paradox: Why Economic Pressure Sometimes Produces the Opposite Effect

A close look at the empirical record of sanctions over three decades raises uncomfortable questions for Western policymakers.

Economic sanctions have become the instrument of first resort for Western governments seeking to alter the behaviour of adversarial states. But a growing body of research suggests that their effectiveness is far more limited — and their unintended consequences far more significant — than policymakers typically acknowledge.

This analysis examines the evidence from Iran, North Korea, Cuba, and Russia to assess what sanctions can and cannot achieve.