Book contents
- The Cambridge Handbook of Secondary Sanctions and International Law
- The Cambridge Handbook of Secondary Sanctions and International Law
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- 1 Introduction
- Part I Secondary Sanctions
- Part II Secondary Sanctions and General Public International Law
- Part III Secondary Sanctions and International Economic Law
- Part IV Secondary Sanctions in Commercial Practices and Domestic Litigation
- Part V The Future of Secondary Sanctions
- 17 Secondary Sanctions
- 18 US Secondary Sanctions, the Informal Economy, and the Cryptocurrency Disruption
- 19 Secondary Sanctions after Russia’s Invasion of Ukraine
- Index
18 - US Secondary Sanctions, the Informal Economy, and the Cryptocurrency Disruption
from Part V - The Future of Secondary Sanctions
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 December 2024
- The Cambridge Handbook of Secondary Sanctions and International Law
- The Cambridge Handbook of Secondary Sanctions and International Law
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- 1 Introduction
- Part I Secondary Sanctions
- Part II Secondary Sanctions and General Public International Law
- Part III Secondary Sanctions and International Economic Law
- Part IV Secondary Sanctions in Commercial Practices and Domestic Litigation
- Part V The Future of Secondary Sanctions
- 17 Secondary Sanctions
- 18 US Secondary Sanctions, the Informal Economy, and the Cryptocurrency Disruption
- 19 Secondary Sanctions after Russia’s Invasion of Ukraine
- Index
Summary
Secondary sanctions are unique in their audacity. Their application in an interdependent global context raises the specter of an uncontrolled burn, with consequences stretching beyond even their broadest scope. Such consequences reshape markets and, at times, create new ones. This chapter uses Iran as a lens through which to examine the relationship between the informal economy and US secondary sanctions and the potential disruption provided by the proliferation of cryptocurrencies. The chapter ultimately concludes that despite much-heralded potential, cryptocurrency’s disruption to the US financial system’s supremacy, as well as the sanctions regimes reliant on such supremacy, remains, for now, limited. This incomplete disruption means that any blunting effect provided by cryptocurrency on secondary sanctions cannot fully protect the informal economies and the participants therein from the effects of such sanctions, particularly in more protracted sanctions regimes. Indeed, cryptocurrency’s likeliest role in US sanctions is not to upend the secondary sanctions regime but rather to complicate the enforcement process. Given its rapid proliferation and built-in cryptography, cryptocurrency is likely to continue to make enforcement of sanctions more difficult, more expensive, and, perhaps, less appealing to pursue all potential evaders.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024