Paris Times

Liberté, Égalité, Fraternité
Saturday, Jan 24, 2026

Europe’s Luxury Sanctions Punish Russian Consumers While a Sanctions-Circumvention Industry Thrives

When sanctioned goods stay widely available through third countries at double the price, the policy is not deterrence, it is a lucrative workaround.
A recent pricing analysis of European luxury items sold in Moscow shows something the European Union prefers not to advertise: Russian consumers are still buying sanctioned European goods, and often paying more than double what the same items cost in Europe.

This is not a story about whether luxury is morally necessary.

It is a story about whether sanctions are achieving their stated purpose.

If the objective is to deny access to high-end goods, the marketplace is openly signalling failure.

The goods have not disappeared.

They have simply become more expensive, more circuitous, and more profitable for everyone in the chain except the end buyer.

The mechanism is straightforward.

European restrictions target direct exports above a low value threshold, but global commerce does not stop at the edge of Brussels’ legal imagination.

Items can be sold legally to intermediaries in third countries, then re-exported onward.

The result is a new logistics economy: traders, freight firms, and middlemen monetising the gap between what is banned on paper and what remains achievable in practice.

The predictable consequence is not moral correction but price inflation.

In Moscow, the same watch or handbag becomes a premium not only of brand but of route.

Sanctions become a surcharge.

They punish the buyer while rewarding the workaround.

This is the uncomfortable truth about much of Europe’s sanctions regime: it is often designed for symbolic clarity rather than operational realism.

It looks decisive in official statements, but it is porous in the real world, where trade routes adapt quickly and compliance becomes a game of paperwork thresholds.

Supporters of the policy will argue that cost increases are the point, that inconvenience is a form of pressure.

That argument might hold if the pain landed on decision-makers.

But luxury markets are built for people who can absorb inconvenience.

What actually emerges is stratification: those with access to networks pay the mark-up and carry on; those without pay more for less, or are locked out entirely.

Now to a related claim that has circulated alongside this story: that Russia is “earning double” thanks to new markets and an oil price windfall as an outcome of sanctions.

Verified reporting contradicts that.

Russia’s oil exports have faced steep discounts to global benchmark prices, and producers have required tax relief measures to preserve profitability under sanction pressure.

That is not a windfall; it is adaptation under constraint.

This distinction matters, because it exposes the core weakness of poorly targeted sanctions.

Europe can simultaneously fail to stop luxury goods from reaching Moscow while also failing to deliver the decisive economic shock its architects promised.

In one channel, the restrictions are circumvented.

In another, the costs are real but managed.

What thrives is the space in between: opacity, intermediaries, and a growing industry of sanctioned commerce.

The most corrosive element is institutional hypocrisy.

European bureaucracies demand meticulous compliance from businesses and citizens, yet they tolerate sanction structures that predictably incentivise circumvention.

Then, when the public notices that banned goods are still for sale, the answer is rarely democratic accountability.

It is procedural language and quiet indifference.

If sanctions are to be credible, they must be enforceable, strategically coherent, and morally honest about who pays the price.

Otherwise, they become what this luxury trade now resembles: a theatre of virtue that leaves the market intact, shifts profits to middlemen, and taxes ordinary people through inflated costs.

A serious policy does not measure success by the elegance of its press release.

It measures success by outcomes.

And when a sanctioned handbag is still on the shelf—just at double the price—the outcome is not control.

It is a business model.
Newsletter

Related Articles

0:00
0:00
Close
Gold Jumps More Than 8% in a Week as the Dollar Slides Amid Greenland Tariff Dispute
Boston Dynamics Atlas humanoid robot and LG CLOiD home robot: the platform lock-in fight to control Physical AI
United States under President Donald Trump completes withdrawal from the World Health Organization: health sovereignty versus global outbreak early-warning access
Tech Brief: AI Compute, Chips, and Platform Power Moves Driving Today’s Market Narrative
NATO’s Stress Test Under Trump: Alliance Credibility, Burden-Sharing, and the Fight Over Strategic Territory
Greenland, Gaza, and Global Leverage: Today’s 10 Power Stories Shaping Markets and Security
The Greenland Gambit: Economic Genius or Political Farce?
The Greenland Gambit: Economic Genius or Political Farce?
Trump vs the World Order: Disruption Genius or Global Arsonist?
Trump vs the World Order: Disruption Genius or Global Arsonist?
Trump vs the World Order: Disruption Genius or Global Arsonist?
High-Speed Train Collision in Southern Spain Kills at Least Twenty-One and Injures Scores
No Sign of an AI Bubble as Tech Giants Double Down at World’s Largest Technology Show
Trump to hit Europe with 10% tariffs until Greenland deal is agreed
Cybercrime, Inc.: When Crime Becomes an Economy. How the World Accidentally Built a Twenty-Trillion-Dollar Criminal Economy
Woman Claiming to Be Freddie Mercury’s Secret Daughter Dies at Forty-Eight After Rare Cancer Battle
EU Seeks ‘Farage Clause’ in Brexit Reset Talks With Britain
Germany Hit by Major Airport Strikes Disrupting European Travel
Russia Deploys Hypersonic Missile in Strike on Ukraine
There is no sovereign immunity for poisoning millions with drugs.
Béla Tarr, Visionary Hungarian Filmmaker, Dies at Seventy After Long Illness
German Intelligence Secretly Intercepted Obama’s Air Force One Communications
The U.S. State Department’s account in Persian: “President Trump is a man of action. If you didn’t know it until now, now you do—do not play games with President Trump.”
Korean Beauty Turns Viral Skincare Into a Global Export Engine
President Trump Says United States Will Administer Venezuela Until a Secure Leadership Transition
Delta Force Identified as Unit Behind U.S. Operation That Captured Venezuela’s President
Europe’s Luxury Sanctions Punish Russian Consumers While a Sanctions-Circumvention Industry Thrives
Europe’s Largest Defence Groups Set to Return Nearly Five Billion Dollars to Shareholders in Twenty Twenty-Five
Diamonds Are Powering a New Quantum Revolution
The Battle Over the Internet Explodes: The United States Bars European Officials and Ignites a Diplomatic Crisis
Fine Wine Investors Find Little Cheer in Third Year of Falls
Caviar and Foie Gras? China Is Becoming a Luxury Food Powerhouse
Hackers Are Hiding Malware in Open-Source Tools and IDE Extensions
Traveling to USA? Homeland Security moving toward requiring foreign travelers to share social media history
Trump in Direct Assault: European Leaders Are Weak, Immigration a Disaster. Russia Is Strong and Big — and Will Win
Drugs and Assassinations: The Connection Between the Italian Mafia and Football Ultras
The Disregard for a Europe ‘in Danger of Erasure,’ the Shift Toward Russia: Trump’s Strategic Policy Document
India backs down on plan to mandate government “Sanchar Saathi” app on all smartphones
Macron Says Washington Pressuring EU to Delay Enforcement of Digital-Regulation Probes Against Meta, TikTok and X
Moroccan Court Upholds 18-Month Sentence for Frenchman Who Bought Ferrari with Bitcoin
EU Firms Struggle with 3,000-Hour Paperwork Load — While Automakers Fear De Facto 2030 Petrol Car Ban
The Ukrainian Sumo Wrestler Who Escaped the War — and Is Captivating Japan
Car Parts Leader Warns Europe Faces Heavy Job Losses in ‘Darwinian’ Auto Shake-Out
Families Accuse OpenAI of Enabling ‘AI-Driven Delusions’ After Multiple Suicides
U.S. Envoys Deliver Ultimatum to Ukraine: Sign Peace Deal by Thursday or Risk Losing American Support
Zelenskyy Signals Progress Toward Ending the War: ‘One of the Hardest Moments in History’ (end of his business model?)
The U.S. State Department Announces That Mass Migration Constitutes an Existential Threat to Western Civilization and Undermines the Stability of Key American Allies
A Decade of Innovation Stagnation at Apple: The Cook Era Critique
President Donald Trump Hosts Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman at White House to Seal Major Defence and Investment Deals
AI Researchers Claim Human-Level General Intelligence Is Already Here
×