The UK government has announced a ban on exports of management services to Russia, as it further ratchets up economic pressure on the Kremlin following its invasion of Ukraine.
Russia’s access to the UK’s management consulting, accounting, and public relations services will be cut off, Foreign Secretary Liz Truss said on May 4.
Russia is heavily reliant on Western services companies for the production and export of manufactured goods, and the UK accounts for 10 percent of Russian imports in these sectors, according to the UK Foreign Office.
Truss said in a statement: “Doing business with [Russian President Vladimir] Putin’s regime is morally bankrupt and helps fund a war machine that is causing untold suffering across Ukraine. Cutting Russia’s access to British services will put more pressure on the Kremlin and ultimately help ensure Putin fails in Ukraine.”
Business Secretary Kwasi Kwarteng said the UK’s professional services exports are “extraordinarily valuable to many countries.”
“By restricting Russia’s access to our world-class management consultants, accountants, and PR firms, we’re ratcheting up economic pressure on the Kremlin to change course,” he said.
But according to industry bodies, many British accountancy and consultancy firms have already taken steps to cut their business links with Russia since the invasion began on Feb. 24.
He said his organisation is “confident” that British accountants will be “ready and willing to play the fullest possible role in making these further measures effective.”
MCA chief executive Tamzen Isacsson added: “The amount of services exported previously to the country was very small and it was not a major foreign market for UK management consultancy services.”
Meanwhile, the government also announced 63 new sanctions, including travel bans and asset freezes for individuals linked to Russian broadcasters and newspapers.
Those sanctioned include significant individuals at Channel One, a major state-owned outlet in Russia, as well as war correspondents who are embedded with Russian forces in Ukraine.
New legislation will, meanwhile, require social media companies to take action to block content from two Russian media outlets—RT and Sputnik.