In the months since the annexation of Crimea, the likely impact of Russia’s actions – and the western sanctions imposed in response – on its own faltering economy has been exhaustively discussed. Yet the potential knock-on effect of the crisis on Ukraine’s northern neighbour, Belarus, has been almost entirely ignored.
This is perhaps unsurprising, given the reluctance of authoritarian president Alexander Lukashenko to open his country up to private-sector – and especially western – investment. Twenty-three years on from the demise of the Soviet Union, the state still controls more than two-thirds of Belarus’s economy, while Russia remains the country’s key trading partner and main source of external investment.
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