Plugging Africa's leak

The development paradigm and illicit financial outflows

Every year billions of dollars of potential development capital are drained from Africa through holes in the continent’s ‘bottomless bucket’ as a result of illicit financial outflows, writes Karley Curcio. Greater transparency and oversight of financial dealings is the only way to curb this monetary drain, which restricts the majority of ordinary people’s access to capital, Curcio argues.

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Amalthya

Foreign aid programs continue to pour funds into what seems like Africa's bottomless bucket. Illicit financial flows out of Africa are twice the amount of foreign aid into the region. Between 1970 and 2008, according to a study by Global Financial Integrity (GDI), illicit flows from Africa totalled at least US$854 billion, and could reach as high as US$1.8 trillion when taking into account missing data from certain countries and other conduits of illicit flows not captured in the study.

Although US$1.8 trillion is already an incredible volume of illicit outflows, the actual figure could be higher still. This figure grows if we account for untraceable money generated by smuggling, violations of intellectual property rights, trade in narcotics and other contraband goods, human trafficking, sex trade and other illegal activities.

Illicit flows have been a consistent and crippling problem in African countries. The Global Financial Integrity study found that illicit funds from the continent have continued to ratchet upwards every decade since the 1970s at an average rate of 12 per cent per year. In fact, Africa is a net creditor to the world – it ‘gives’ back to the world through illicit capital flight at least twice, and in some regions thrice, the amount of capital it receives in external assistance. No wonder, then, that this staggering loss of capital seriously hampers Africa's efforts at poverty alleviation and economic development, decade after decade.

COMPLICITY OF BANKS

Traditional policy interpretations of ‘capital flight’ do appropriately account for the debilitating effects of the money leaving these countries – money that these countries desperately need to build economic and political foundations. But this antiquated approach does not recognise that banking institutions in the developed world facilitate the absorption of illicit funds.

Illicit flows must be curtailed through a two-pronged approach, which recognises that both developing and developed countries must do their part in addressing the problem. While developing countries, like those in Africa, currently lack the governance and transparency to effectively regulate and control these outflows, equally at fault are the jurisdictions – mostly developed countries and their Western banking institutions – that not only absorb these illicit funds without hindrance, but actually solicit them through ‘private investment’ banking services. Emerging markets need to implement sound economic policies and improve governance. But developed countries also need to ensure that the financial institutions that absorb these flows are subject to stricter oversight and operate in a more transparent manner.

The drivers of illicit financial flows vary from country to country, but overall transparency in the global financial system would significantly curtail all forms of outflows, by making it harder for tax cheats and other corrupt individuals to siphon off funds from the country. If retained by the region, the astonishing US$854 billion estimated to have flown out of Africa would be enough to not only wipe out Africa's total outstanding external debt of around US$250 billion (as of December 2008), but it would also provide around US$600 billion for poverty alleviation and economic growth.

Development aid to Africa won't be effective as long as these illicit outflows continue to grow. Sub-Saharan African countries experienced the bulk of illicit capital leaving the continent, with the West and Central African region registering the largest outflows. The top five countries with the highest outflows were: Nigeria (US$240.7 billion), Egypt (US$131.3 billion), South Africa (US$76.4 billion), Morocco (US$41.0 billion) and Algeria (US$35.1 billion). Estimates indicate that Africa lost around US$29 billion per year from 1970-2008, of which the sub-Saharan region accounted for US$22 billion. On average, countries like Nigeria that export oil lost capital at nearly US$10 billion per year, far outstripping the US$2.5 billion per year lost by the group of countries exporting non-fuel primary commodities. Indeed, these numbers indicate that much of the wealth generated by oil-exporting African countries does not trickle down sufficiently to benefit the nation's population.

In developing countries that do not or are unable to implement genuine economic reform and better governance, economic growth brings more opportunities for individuals to accumulate illegal wealth and transfer that wealth abroad. In periods where illicit outflows accelerated, oil prices increased, and so did opportunities to mis-invoice trade. In fact, two methods often used to siphon money away from legal and traceable markets involve the under-invoicing and over-invoicing of exports and imports, respectively.

FIXING A BROKEN MODEL

The current development paradigm isn't working. Poverty rates continue to stagnate and even rise, and countries such as Somalia, Sudan and Zimbabwe continue to struggle as failed states. In fact, the political and economic foundations that typically underlie stable and prosperous countries are absent in most African countries. According to the UN Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), US$348 billion is needed to meet the goals by 2010 and US$529 billion by 2015. If illicit financial flows are not curtailed, Africa and its donors won't be able to meet these goals.

Policy measures must be taken to address the factors underlying illicit outflows and also to impress upon the Group of Twenty (G20) the need for better transparency and tighter oversight of the international banks and offshore financial centres that absorb these funds. Global Financial Integrity recently launched the G20 Transparency Campaign to enable people around the world to take action on the problem of illicit financial flows. When the G20 meets in Canada this June, this problem must be at the top of the agenda.

Reform of this shadow financial system through greater transparency is in the best interest of not only African countries seeking economic growth, but also the interests of developed countries. Curtailing illicit flows would improve the effectiveness of aid and help graduate African countries from aid dependence to a path of sustained economic development.

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* This article was originally published by Foreign Policy In Focus.
* Karly Curcio is a junior economist at Global Financial Integrity.
* Please send comments to [email protected] or comment online at Pambazuka News.