Copyright
2004 The Financial Times Limited
Financial Times (London, England)
October
13, 2004 Wednesday
London Edition 1
SECTION:
COMMENT; Pg. 21
LENGTH:
837 words
HEADLINE:
How dirty money binds the poor: RAYMOND BAKER and JENNIFER NORDIN:
BYLINE:
By RAYMOND BAKER and JENNIFER NORDIN
BODY:
The World Bank in its 2005 World Development Report issued last
month calls for governments to promote a "better investment
climate" in the developing world and implores the international
community to remove trade barriers and offer more aid. "A
good investment climate", it declares, "plays a central
role in growth and poverty reduction." All nice words, but
the bank overlooks the shadowy underside of the global economy
that conspires to keep poor countries in their place.
For
more than 50 years, the World Bank has committed billions of dollars
and the brain power of some of the brightest economists to fighting
poverty, and yet outright success has been elusive. Even among
World Bank staffers, there is a sense that something is missing
that might explain the mystery of why so much development aid
has done so little good.
James
Wolfensohn was the first bank president to ask the question: could
illegal financial practices be partly responsible? At his urging,
the World Bank took up for the first time the issues of corruption,
fraud and accountability, with some success. The bank now ranks
countries based on corruption indicators and keeps a list of unscrupulous
contractors barred from World Bank projects. Corruption is now
an important factor in lending, a welcome change after years of
denial.
Unfortunately,
the crooked and the corrupt in poor countries have had a long
head start. The World Bank and the International Monetary Fund
helped to underwrite decades of deceit by lending billions of
dollars to some of the most corrupt regimes on the planet. Between
1970 and 2002, for example, the World Bank and the IMF disbursed
Dollars 232bn to Indonesia, Dollars 94bn to the Philippines, Dollars
28bn to Nigeria and Dollars 10bn to Congo/Zaire. Compare this
with Transparency International's tallies of theft at the highest
levels: up to Dollars 35bn by Suharto, Dollars 10bn by Ferdinand
Marcos, Dollars 5bn by Sani Abacha and Dollars 5bn by Mobutu Sese
Seko.
The
World Bank's narrow focus on corruption ignores the much larger
problem of cross-border dirty money. In the broadest sense, it
is money that is illegally earned, illegally used or illegally
transferred, and has three main facets: criminal proceeds from
drug trafficking and racketeering; commercial proceeds from transfer
pricing and shady business transactions, often hidden in tax havens;
and corrupt proceeds from greedy government officials. Western
businesses and banks have facilitated and sheltered this dirty
money for years. Of the total, the corrupt portion is actually
the smallest, representing less than 10 per cent.
The
missing piece of the development puzzle is the impact of this
illegal capital flight on global poverty. About Dollars 50bn (Pounds
28bn) in aid flows to developing and transitional economies from
richer nations each year. At the same time, roughly Dollars 500bn
in dirty money - in all its forms - flows in the opposite direction
out of poorer countries. Aid inflows are swamped by a torrent
of illicit outflows. For every Dollars 1 the west distributes
in assistance across the top of the table, we take back some Dollars
10 in illegal proceeds under the table.
The
consequences of these illicit outflows on the developing world
are massive. They deepen poverty, foster crime, facilitate terrorism
and void trade and investment. They also dampen economic development,
support large-scale tax evasion and generate economic instability.
Indeed, the illicit flow negates the World Bank's very mission
and best intentions.
Consider
what that Dollars 500bn would do if it stayed in poor countries.
It would make a large dent in the most pressing human needs of
our time: universal childhood vaccination, more classrooms and
teachers, clean water systems and basic medical care for millions
of people - and there would be billions of dollars remaining for
investment and growth.
Certainly,
the dirty money problem is far larger than one multilateral institution.
However, as the world's leading organisation charged with easing
the burdens of poverty, it is in the World Bank's interest to
expose one of the most damaging economic conditions facing the
poor. Here, leadership is crucial to getting a firm grasp on the
amount of dirty money flowing out of developing and transitional
economies, its effect on these countries and its effect on development
aid programmes. Any problem that can be identified and measured
is a step closer to being solved.
Focusing solely on corruption, while neglecting other forms of
illegal capital flight, is a formula for failure. The World Bank
must put all these illicit flows on its agenda before development
aid can reach its potential. A full, unflinching look at how dirty
money sustains worldwide poverty would pay very rich dividends.
Raymond
Baker is a senior fellow at the Center for International Policy
in Washington, DC, and is author of the forthcoming book Capitalism's
Achilles' Heel; Jennifer Nordin is director of economic studies
at the Center for International Policy
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October 12, 2004