cross-posted from: https://scribe.disroot.org/post/4097567
In Russia, barter is back for the first time since the chaos of the 1990s as settlement problems resulting from the conflict in Ukraine have forced at least one Chinese company to seek steel and aluminium alloys in exchange for engines.
In the economic and political chaos which followed the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union, spiralling inflation and chronic shortages of funds forced enterprises across the land to agree to payment in kind.
Barter, though, sowed even more chaos through the economy as vast chains of contingent deals were set up for everything from electricity and oil to flour, sugar and boots, making pricing even harder to determine, and earning some people fortunes.
More than three years into the Ukraine war, barter is back again in Russia.
At the Kazan Expo business forum on Monday, Chinese companies cited settlement issues and Russian demands that they bring production to Russia as major issues hindering the development of bilateral trade.
“We offer innovative cooperation models aimed at reducing settlement risks,” Xu Xinjing from Hainan Longpan Oilfield Technology Co., Ltd told the forum through a translator, adding that “we offer a model of barter trade.”
In exchange for the power equipment, his company wants to receive Russian shipbuilding materials.
[…]
looks blank
I can see China importing ore from Russia, but…China is importing steel? Like, one of the top international trade issues with China over past years has been China exporting enough steel to swamp world markets, where countries are worried about maintaining some level of domestic production, as steel is a strategic good.
kagis
Hmm. This says that Russia “rerouted” steel to China — I assume having to sell below cost — due to sanctions during the war; maybe the Russian steel industry is hoping to outlast the current period of sanctions.
https://agmetalminer.com/2025/07/02/chinese-steel-industry-floods-russia/
https://tradingeconomics.com/china/imports/russia/iron-steel
Yeah, it looks like the exports were only over the past five years, mostly during the war.
Maybe the Chinese company in question is basically looking to get steel subsidized by the Russian state even more cheaply than it could in China, effectively make a buck off the war when the Russian steel industry lacks export options.