Yellen says price cap on Russian oil can help address inflation

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BALI, Indonesia — A cap on Russian oil prices will be crucial to help bring down inflation as U.S. consumer inflation soared to a 40-year high of 9.1% this week, U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said on Thursday.

Speaking before the start of the Group of 20 finance ministers and central bank governors meeting in Bali, Yellen said efforts must be expended to rein in two key economic fallouts from the Russia-Ukraine crisis — that is, high fuel prices and rising food insecurity which are sweeping across the U.S. and globally.

High energy costs contributed heavily to the spike in U.S. inflation this week, she added.

“We’re seeing negative spillover effects from [the Russia-Ukraine] war in every corner of the world, particularly with respect to higher energy prices, and rising food insecurity,” Yellen said.

A price cap on Russian oil is one of our most powerful tools to address the pain that Americans and families across the world are feeling at the gas pump and the grocery store right now.

Janet Yellen

U.S. Treasury Secretary

She said the U.S. will continue conversations with other countries to see “what we can do together to help others around the world impacted by Russia’s war.” It includes addressing food insecurity, and the design and implementation of a price cap on Russian oil, she added.

“A price cap on Russian oil is one of our most powerful tools to address the pain that Americans and families across the world are feeling at the gas pump and the grocery store right now. A limit on the price of Russian oil will deny Putin revenue his war machine needs.”

As Washington bans Russian oil and European countries look to cut Russian oil use, prices of oil have surged. Crude oil prices rose above $120 a barrel in March after the Russia-Ukraine war started.

Economists have warned that further bans could propel prices to as high as $175 a barrel.

Shell’s Vito Offshore Oil Platform docked at Kiewit Offshore Services while under construction onshore in Ingleside, Texas, U.S., on Wednesday, April 6, 2022.

Eddie Seal | Bloomberg | Getty Images

The price cap mechanism involved the U.S. and other countries forming a cartel to buy Russian oil at a low enough price to keep Russian oil production profitable and supply forthcoming but at the same time starve Russia from being able to fund its war in Ukraine.

“We’ll build on the historic sanctions we’ve already implemented that make it more difficult for him to wage his war or grow his economy,” Yellen said.

Russia has been silent on the proposal, while other countries like India have not weighed in.

On Thursday, China indicated the price cap could worsen the Ukraine crisis. Chinese Ministry of Commerce spokeswoman Shu Jueting said a price cap would be complicated and instead urged countries to pursue peace talks in order to end the war.

Yellen said she is hopeful the price cap will be attractive to many Russian oil importing companies as it will mitigate the high costs of import due to insurance and financial bans on Russian oil deliveries.

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Late last month, the European Union imposed a ban on insuring ships transporting Russian oil.

“So I’m hopeful that China and India will see that observing a price cap would serve their own interests in lowering the price that they pay for Russian oil, they’re important importers,” Yellen said.

“But even if they don’t observe the price cap, I think it’s certain that many countries that import Russian oil will be affected by the insurance and financial services ban that the EU, and presumably the UK and the U.S. will put into effect.

The Treasury Secretary said that without the price cap, “we would likely see very much higher global prices because that ban would result in … a significant amount of a shut in for Russian oil.”

— CNBC’s Evelyn Cheng contributed to this report.

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