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Why multilateral and global institutions can matter

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Global Witness transparency campaigns evolved first out of Angola ... Global Witness, IMF/Wbank, broadly aligned on Angola transparency. Example 2: The 'Elf Affair' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Why multilateral and global institutions can matter


1
Why multilateral and global institutions can
matter
  • Risks of relying only on country-by-country or
    regional approaches

2
Three points
  • My focus African Oil, Resource Curse Financial
    flows are international. Country-by-country
    approaches fail. (Not only oil.)
  • Tax havens are fundamental.
  • Multilateral institutions can be allies on
    transparency.

3
Global, not national problems
  • Three examples
  • Angola - Gaydamak
  • Elf Affair
  • Transparency Internationals CPI

4
Example 1 Angola
  • 2m bpd by the end of this year
  • 30bn budget for 2007
  • (compares with 30bn OECD countries aid to
    sub-Saharan Africa)
  • Unicef Under-5 mortality 260/1000 second worst
    in world
  • More generally Resource Curse Nigeria, etc.
    etc.
  • Governance, transparency key

5
Example Angolas Russian debt dealers
  • 5bn debt from Cold War era Debt rescheduled
  • Businessmen Arcadi Gaydamak, Pierre Falcone
    inserted themselves into this deal
  • 750m flowed from Geneva into mysterious
    accounts Luxembourg, Cyprus, Moscow, Amsterdam,
    etc.
  • Swiss investigating magistrate called this
    criminal organisation, but case was dropped.
  • The money disappeared into the interstices
    between states.
  • Judges got little co-operation

6
Oil transparency Campaign
  • Global Witness transparency campaigns evolved
    first out of Angola
  • Led to Publish What You Pay (PWYP), Extractive
    Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI)
  • Global Witness, IMF/Wbank, broadly aligned on
    Angola transparency

7
Example 2 The Elf Affair
  • Magistrates (Paris, Geneva) from 1994 uncovered
    African oil as offshore source of slush money
  • For bribing African and other leaders
    (20-60c/barrel)
  • For financing / supporting
  • French and European political parties
  • French foreign policy assignments
  • French companies overseas
  • French intelligence domestic and foreign
  • Personal corruption

8
The Elf System
  • Elf Gabon / African oil central
  • Military relationships / mercenaries
  • Freemasonry and secret societies link French and
    African politics
  • Money through international banks and tax havens

  • Other oil countries e.g. Congo, Angola
  • Africans could only see a part of it, never the
    whole.
  • African oil corrupted politics around the world
    e.g. France, Biafra, Taiwan, Germany, Spain,
    Uzbekistan, Venezuela, etc. etc. - all involved.
  • French investigators didnt get co-operation from
    many jurisdictions - notably London.

9
Country by country approaches could EITI tackle
the Elf Affair?
  • No Separating African oil corruption from French
    corruption misses the point. Elf Affair was
    transnational, via tax havens. Splitting flows
    internationally is key to secrecy.Result
    Africans are corrupt, we are not.
  • Eva Joly (Norway), investigating magistrate in
    the Elf Affair
  • The magistrates are like sheriffs in the
    spaghetti westerns who watch the bandits
    celebrate on the other side of the Rio Grande. .
    . they taunt usand there is nothing we can do.
  • Dealing with tax havens phase two in the
    corruption debate

10
Was the Elf Affair unique?
  • No think Britain, United States, Saudi Arabia.
  • Oil-based, transnational character, tax havens,
    secrecy, Strategic, underpinned by military
    relationship, corrupting democracy in the west
  • Elf System is the only one ever broken open by
    forces of law order.
  • Not just oil-related entire international
    financial system is fragmented.
  • Countries compete to suck capital out of each
    other, leading to secrecy, tax havens,
    inequality.
  • Poor, badly governed countries most vulnerable
  • One country cannot take a lead global,
    multilateral approach needed

11
Example 3 Corruption surveys
  • Transparency Internationals CPI more than half
    of cleanest 20 in CPI are tax havens.
  • CPI 2007 Switzerland is seventh cleanest
    (BPI Switzerland is cleanest)
  • Reflects demand side of corruption. Ignores
    supply side (international financial
    infrastructure is ignored)
  • Result of country-by-country approach Africans
    are corrupt, West is not
  • Global approach would change everything

12
Nature of problem?
  • Countries/financial centres e.g. London compete
    to suck capital out of each other.
  • Poor countries weakest result is financial flows
    South-North. Capital flight
  • Public debts, private assets offshore. E.g.
    Africa
  • Elites escape responsibilities, others pay
  • Free-rider problem - only global co-operation
    works. Multilateral approach.
  • Biggest tax havens not small islands but
    Switzerland, London, New York

13
Magnitude of problem?
  • Tax Justice Network 11.5 trillion offshore-
    leading to losses of 255bn annually - c/w MDG
    efforts
  • World Bank - StAR The cross-border flow of the
    global proceeds from criminal activities,
    corruption, and tax evasion is estimated at
    between 1 trillion and 1.6 trillion per year.
  • Raymond Baker/GFIP for every 1 that we have
    been generously handing out across the top of the
    table (in aid), we in the West have been taking
    back some 10 of illicit money under the table.
    More analysis, better analysis in the future may
    make this a narrower picture or make it a wider
    picture. But no analysis will make this a pretty
    picture.

14
Why has the tax haven/tax issue not been tackled?
  • Complex, hard to understand
  • Secrecy hard to study, blind spots
  • Economics and tax - unattractive for many
  • Public/private interface - confusing
  • Huge vested interests (companies/countries)
  • Narrow focus on money-laundering, bribery
  • Somebody elses problem spaceship
  • Focus on aid (north-south) and not on (bigger)
    leakages (south-north)
  • Tax haven problem falls between rich-world and
    poor-world campaigns
  • All poor excuses. This is the missing link in
    development debates, democracy debates.

15
Role of multilaterals?
  • World Bank waking up StAR Initiative 2007
  • The traditional focus of the international
    development community has been on addressing
    corruption and weak governance within the
    developing countries themselves, this approach
    ignores the other side of the equation stolen
    assets are often hidden in the financial centers
    of developed countries.
  • Global cooperation is needed to ensure that new
    financial havens do not replace the existing ones
    and developing countries receive the legal
    support they need.
  • IMF ROSCs could be changed to reflect financial
    transparency e.g. London, Manhattan as tax
    havens.
  • IMF 2002 Monterrey FFD Initiative IMF, OECD,
    World Bank propose to facilitate increased
    cooperation on tax matters among governments and
    international organizations by establishing a
    dialogue to share good practices and pursue
    common objectives in improving the functioning of
    national tax systems.

16
A role for Civil Society?
  • International tax policies formulated by tax
    experts who are
  • Beholden to vested interests, companies
  • Focus on technical issues, less on politics or
    democracy
  • Civil society has been almost absent till
    recently
  • Multilaterals are essential civil society needs
    to focus their attention
  • Governments have vested interests, e.g. Britains
    financial services 10 of GDP. Conflict with
    development policy.
  • Civil society is more pure
  • Multilaterals e.g. World Bank has explicit
    development mission

17
In the IMFs words
  • Developing countries must be able to raise the
    revenues required to finance the services
    demanded by their citizens and the infrastructure
    (physical and social) that will enable them to
    move out of poverty. Taxation will play the key
    role in this revenue mobilization. Perhaps the
    greatest challenge facing these countries is to
    improve the effectiveness of their tax
    administrations.
  • In this context, the increasing globalization of
    the economy is relevant both for developed and
    developing countries. The constraints that it
    places on countries' ability to set and enforce
    their own taxes are felt increasingly keenly.
  • www.imf.org/external/np/fad/itd/2002/031302.htm

18
THE END
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