Money exchanging hands. Kenya has lost about Sh73 billion (US$ 847
million) in crime, corruption, and tax evasion for a decade. disclosed
that nearly $6 trillion were stolen from developing countries in decade
between 2002 and 2011. PHOTO | EMMA NZIOKA | FILE
NATION MEDIA GROUP
Kenya has lost about Sh73 billion (US$ 847 million) in crime, corruption, and tax evasion for a decade.
This
is according to a new study published by Global Financial Integrity
(GFI), a Washington, DC-based research and advocacy organisation has
revealed.
The study that was carried out between 2002
and 2011, however, indicates that in 2006, Kenya had no case of illicit
financial outflows as well as between 2008 and 2011.
It reveals that most of the activities took place in 2003, 2004, 2005 and 2007 in the country.
The
study also indicates that crime, corruption, and tax evasion drained
US$946.7 billion from the developing countries in 2011, 13.7 percentage
more than 2010—when illicit financial outflows totalled US$832.4
billion.
It also disclosed that nearly $6 trillion was stolen from developing countries in decade between 2002 and 2011.
In
East Africa, Uganda leads in the illicit financial outflows with
accumulative of US$7,373million followed by Tanzania which had US$4,441
while Nigeria led in Africa with US$119,784.
China,
Russia, Mexico, Malaysia, India in declining order are biggest exporters
of illicit capital over decade while Sub-Saharan Africa suffers biggest
Illicit outflows.
The report, “Illicit Financial Flows
from Developing Countries: 2002-2011 is GFI’s 2013 annual update on the
amount of money flowing out of developing economies as a result of
crime, corruption and tax evasion.
FINANCIAL CRISIS
“As
the world economy sputters along in the wake of the global financial
crisis, the illicit underworld is thriving siphoning more and more money
from developing countries each year,” said GFI President Raymond Baker.
He
went on: “Anonymous shell companies, tax haven secrecy, and
trade-based money laundering techniques drained nearly a trillion
dollars from the world’s poorest in 2011, at a time when rich and poor
nations alike are struggling to spur economic growth.”
He said that while the global momentum has been building over the past year to curtail the problem, it’s time to act.
However,
GFI Chief Economist Dev Kar, who served as a senior economist at the
International Monetary Fund before joining GFI in January 2008 said that
much of the proceeds of drug trafficking, human smuggling, and other
criminal activities, which are often settled in cash, were not included
in the estimates.
“It’s extremely troubling to note
just how fast illicit flows are growing,” stated Dr Kar. This
underscores the urgency with which policymakers should address illicit
financial flows,” said Dr Kar.
He said that the
US$946.7 billion that flowed illicitly out of developing countries in
2011 was approximately 10 times more than the US$93.8 billion official
development assistance (ODA) that went into these specific 150
developing countries.
He noted that for every US$1 in
economic development assistance going into a developing country, roughly
US$10 of capital are lost via illicit outflows.
“Illicit
financial flows have major consequences for developing economies,”
explained Mr Brian LeBlanc, the co-author of the report.
He
said that poor countries haemorrhaged nearly a trillion dollars from
their economies in 2011 that could have been invested in local
businesses, healthcare, education, or infrastructure.
“This
is nearly a trillion dollars that could have been used to help pull
people out of poverty and save lives. Without concrete action, the
drain on the developing world is only going to grow larger,” he said.
Nigeria
and South Africa made it to the 25 biggest exporters of illicit
financial flows over the decade and who also includes China, Russia,
Mexico, India, Malaysia, Saudi Arabia, Brazil, Indonesia, Iraq,
Thailand, United Arabs Emirates, Philippines, Costa Rica, Belarus,
Qatarm, Poland, Serbia, Chile, Paraguay, Venezuela, Brunei, Panama and
Turkey.
Sudan, South Africa, Egypt and Nigeria also
made it to the list of top exporters of illegal capital in 2011 while
the globally, annual illicit financial outflows averaged 4 per cent of
GDP.
Russia was rated as the second biggest exporter of
illicit capital over the decade, with US$880.96 billion in illicit
outflows at that time—estimated that the Russian economy lost at least
US$211.5 billion in illegal capital flight between 1994 and 2011.
China
was rated as the largest cumulative exporter of illegal capital flight,
with outflows totalling $1.08 trillion over the decade.
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