Kenya has lost about Sh73bn in 10 years to criminals, tax evaders and
the corrupt, according to a new study published by Global Financial
Integrity. FILE
By Nation Correspondent
Kenya has lost about Sh73 billion in 10 years to criminals, tax evaders and the corrupt, a new study shows.
The study published by Global Financial Integrity
(GFI), a Washington, DC-based research and advocacy organisation, was
carried out between 2002 to 2011.
In 2006, Kenya had no reported case of illicit financial outflows as well as between 2008 and 2011.
In 2006, Kenya had no reported case of illicit financial outflows as well as between 2008 and 2011.
The study revealed that most of the activities took place in 2003, 2004, 2005 and 2007.
The study also revealed that crime, corruption,
and tax evasion drained US$946.7 billion from developing countries in
2011, up more than 13.7 per cent from 2010—when illicit outflows
totalled US$832.4 billion.
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
and human smuggling were not included in the estimates.
“It is extremely troubling to note just how fast
this vice is growing,” stated Dr Kar. “This underscores the urgency
with which policymakers should address the issue,” he added.
He said that what developing countries lost in that period is approximately 10 times the US$93.8 billion they receive in aid.
China leads pack
He said that poor countries haemorrhaged nearly a
trillion dollars 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.
China was rated as the largest cumulative exporter of illegal capital, with outflows totalling $1.08 trillion over the decade.
This article was first published in the Saturday Nation.
No comments :
Post a Comment