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From: radman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [LeftLibertarian] the real free-market?
Date: Saturday, April 22, 2000 8:57 PM

radman says:
sorry, no URL
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From: LE MONDE DIPLOMATIQUE April 2000

 CRIME, THE WORLD'S BIGGEST FREE ENTERPRISE

 Thick as thieves

 By allowing capital to flow unchecked from one end of the world to the
 other, globalisation and abandon of sovereignty have together fostered the
 explosive growth of an outlaw financial market. Indeed the engine of
 capitalist expansion is now oiled by the profits of serious crime. From
 time to time something is done to give the impression of waging war on the
 rapidly expanding banking and tax havens. If governments really wanted to,
 they could right this overnight. But though there are calls for zero
 tolerance of petty crime and unemployment, nothing is being done about the
 big money crimes.

 by CHRISTIAN de BRIE*

 Financial crime is becoming less visible, periodically coming to light in
 one country or another in the guise of scandals involving companies, banks,
 political parties, leaders, cartels, mafias. This flood of illicit
 transactions - offences under national law or international agreements -
 has come to be portrayed just as accidental malfunctions of free market
 economics and democracy that can be put right by something called "good
 governance". But the reality is quite different. It is a coherent system
 closely linked to the expansion of modern capitalism and based on an
 association of three partners: governments, transnational corporations and
 mafias. Business is business: financial crime is first and foremost a
 market, thriving and structured, ruled by supply and demand.

 Big business complicity and political laisser faire is the only way that
 large-scale organised crime can launder and recycle the fabulous proceeds
 of its activities. And the transnationals need the support of governments
 and the neutrality of the regulatory authorities in order to consolidate
 their positions, increase their profits, withstand or crush the
 competition, pull off the "deal of the century" and finance their illicit
 operations. Politicians are directly involved and their ability to
 intervene depends on the backing and the funding that keep them in power.
 This collusion of interests is an essential part of the world economy, the
 oil that keeps the wheels of capitalism turning.

 Three factors have combined to improve the workings of capitalism. The end
 of the 1980s saw the complete liberalisation of capital movements, taking
 them beyond national or international control. Then the revolution in
 communications technology accelerated the expansion of financial
 transactions. Finally, tax havens, that planetary archipelago of centres
 specialising in the tolerance of financial crime, became more "reliable".

 Revolution, said Mao Zedong, is not a dinner party. Neither is competition.
 It has little to do with the tournaments of gallant knights celebrated by
 the troubadours of the free market, where by the grace of God the best
 always wins - the best product or the best service at the best price. As in
 feudal combat, if you want to win the economic war, anything goes - and the
 dirtier the better. The arsenal is well supplied with weapons: restrictive
 practices, cartels, abuse of dominant position, dumping, forced sales,
 insider dealing and speculation, takeovers and dismembering of competitors,
 fraudulent balance sheets, rigging of accounts and transfer prices, the use
 of offshore subsidiaries and shell companies to avoid and evade tax,
 embezzlement of public funds, bogus contracts, corruption and backhanders,
 unjust enrichment and abuse of corporate assets, surveillance and spying,
 blackmail and betrayal, disregard for regulations on employment rights and
 trade union freedoms, health and safety, social security, pollution and the
 environment (1). Not to mention what goes on in the world's growing number
 of free zones, including those in Europe and in France, where the ordinary
 rule of law does not apply, especially in social, tax and financial matters
 (2).

 Such goings on can be found in all major sectors and on all markets: arms,
 oil, public works, civil aviation, air, rail and sea transport,
 telecommunications, banking and insurance, chemicals and food, to name but
 a few. They result in massive misappropriations of funds which disappear
 from the transnationals' bona fide accounts only to resurface in some tax
 haven. An incredible plunder, the full extent of which will never be known.

 All this would be impossible without the power of the state and
 international and regional organisations, especially their ability to keep
 restrictive regulations to a minimum, to abolish or override such rules as
 do exist, to paralyse inquiries and investigations or put them off
 indefinitely, and to reduce or grant amnesty from any penalties. In
 exchange, they offer to "fund democracy" by financing parties' election
 campaigns, promoting the most promising political personalities and senior
 officials; they have them followed and closely watched by armies of
 lobbyists who can be found close to every decision-making authority and
 whose brief is to help them "make the right choices", to corrupt them (3).

 On occasion they have no compunction about using the services of
 professional organised crime. In most of their subsidiaries and offshore
 suppliers in the southern hemisphere, workers have to contend with thugs
 hired by the bosses, blackleg trade unions, strike-breakers, private police
 and death squads. In Japan, recalcitrant shareholders are watched by
 yakusas at general meetings. Or they take out "contracts" on intermediaries
 that have become too much of a nuisance or on over-inquisitive
 investigators: numerous businessmen, bankers, politicians, judges, lawyers
 and journalists have "committed suicide" drinking a cyanide-laced
 cappuccino, hanged themselves or fallen from a tenth floor window with
 their hands tied behind their backs, shot themselves twice in the head,
 drowned fully clothed in a puddle or in the bath, slipped under a bus or
 into a vat of concrete or acid, fallen naked from their yachts into the sea
 under their bodyguard's very eyes, disappeared on a flight or car journey.

 More than anything else, banks and big business are keen to get their hands
 on the proceeds - laundered - of organised crime. Apart from the
 traditional activities of drugs, racketeering, kidnappings, gambling,
 procuring (women and children), smuggling (alcohol, tobacco, medicines),
 armed robbery, counterfeiting and bogus invoicing, tax evasion and
 misappropriation of public funds, new markets are also flourishing. These
 include smuggling illegal labour and refugees, computer piracy, trafficking
 in works of art and antiquities, in stolen cars and parts, in protected
 species and human organs, forgery, trafficking in arms, toxic waste and
 nuclear products, etc.

 Every country has its criminal underworld. The biggest organisations and
 the ones that have been active the longest can be found in the hubs of
 capitalism: the United States (Cosa Nostra), Europe (the Sicilian mafia)
 and Asia (the Chinese triads and Japanese yakusas). Others have also
 emerged over the last few decades, such as the Colombian cartels in Latin
 America and the Russian mafias. Hundreds of rival groups share the national
 and international crime markets. They enter into alliances and
 subcontracting agreements, tending to break up into small, flexible, mobile
 units specialising in a market sector or a profitable niche.

 The annual profits from drug trafficking (cannabis, cocaine, heroin) are
 estimated at $300-500bn (not to mention the rapidly mushrooming synthetic
 drugs), that is 8% to 10% of world trade (4). Computer piracy has a
 turnover in excess of $200bn, counterfeit goods $100bn, European Community
 budget fraud $10-15bn, animal smuggling $20bn, etc. In all, and counting
 only activities with a transnational dimension, including the white slave
 trade, the world's gross criminal product totals far above $1,000bn a year,
 nearly 20% of world trade.

 Even allowing for overheads (production and suppliers, intermediaries and
 corruption, investment expenditure, management costs, losses from seizures
 and crackdowns) amounting to roughly 50% of turnover, that still leaves
 annual profits of $500bn. Over ten years that makes $5,000bn, more than
 three times the foreign currency reserves of all the central banks (5), one
 quarter of the capitalisation of the world's top five stock markets and ten
 times that of Paris (6).

 All that remains is for this fantastic wealth to be managed, impossible as
 it is to dispose of in small denomination notes (7). It is enough to set
 the world's financial brains spinning. But these are the people whose help
 the criminal organisations need if they are to launder all this money and
 recycle it through legal channels. They are willing to pay the price, and
 they do. The cost is about one third, $150bn shared between banking
 networks and intermediaries: lawyers, brokers and trust managers. The
 upshot is that over $350bn are laundered and reinvested annually, that is
 $1bn a day.

 No sector of activity comes anywhere near these figures and none can match
 that capacity, representing as it does between one half and two thirds of
 direct foreign investment (DFI) (8). Close watchers of the markets and of
 globalisation which they understand perfectly, the multinational criminal
 organisations have no time for savings banks. They go for the highest
 gains: hedge funds, inflating the bubble of financial speculation, emerging
 markets, property, new technologies. At the same time, they secure for
 themselves a solid return from the finest of industry and commerce. In
 permanent partnership with the transnationals in which they invest and the
 banks that manage their investments, they are the oil in the wheels of the
 extraordinary expansion of modern capitalism. And they still have enough
 money left over to maintain their lifestyle and help to fund and corrupt
 the political parties and leaders that are best placed to preserve the
 system that serves them so well.

 That is precisely the service that the third partner, political power and
 bureaucracy, renders in exchange for the financial assistance that allows
 it to stay in place, to recover from every setback and to get richer in the
 process. It gives the illusion of a permanent struggle, constantly stepped
 up and internationally coordinated, by governments, police and judiciary
 against financial crime (bribery, trafficking, laundering) while not
 affecting the system's operation. Changing everything so that everything
 stays the same. The failure of over 30 years of international war against
 drug trafficking is testimony to the formula's "success". The same fate
 awaits the fight against money laundering and corruption, ostentatiously
 relaunched by the G7 at the Arch Summit, Paris, in 1989 and, in addition to
 the member countries, involving the United Nations, the Organisation for
 Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), the International Monetary
 Fund (IMF), the Bank for International Settlements (BIS) and the European
 Union.

 Specialist organisations have been set up (9) and international conventions
 signed and ratified for the prevention of corruption on international
 markets (10) and for police cooperation and mutual judicial assistance
 (11), while conferences and studies, commissions of inquiry and reports
 have multiplied. All this has been accompanied by the most strongly worded
 declarations and promises from those in authority, but the system of
 financial crime has not been the least bit shaken. It is poised to win by
 attrition the battle that the best are bent on waging against it; the
 weariness overtaking police and judges engaged on the exemplary Operation
 Clean Hands in Italy is evidence of this. So is the lack of response to the
 alarm (the "Geneva Appeal") sounded by seven specialist European judges at
 the end of 1996 (12).

 There is no question of doing away with tax havens, those places of refuge
 for financial crime, only of encouraging them to adopt codes of good
 conduct. This would be as effective as asking the mafia to provide security
 vans, with a moral obligation to submit its vehicles to a MOT. Nor is there
 any question of setting up any form of permanent international cooperation,
 or even a European judicial area, only of considering discussing it. Yet it
 takes 18 months for a request for judicial assistance to make the round
 trip between Paris and Geneva.

 Better still, under the aegis of international financial crime's number one

 partner, the US, we are seeing a rationalisation, or rather,
 Americanisation, of corruption techniques, seeking to replace the somewhat
 archaic practices of palm-greasing and secret (or open) "commission"
 payments by lobbying, which is more effective and presentable. It is a
 service industry in which the Americans have a considerable lead over their
 competitors, not only in know-how, but also in the vast financial and
 logistical resources they are able to make available to their
 multinationals; these include the secret services of the world's most
 powerful state apparatus, which, with the cold war over, have moved into
 economic warfare.

 This is evidenced by the media success of the publication of an annual
 league table of bribe paying and taking countries drawn up by Transparency
 International, a lobbying association and CIA correspondent funded by
 governments and corporations, especially American ones, that are experts in
 the matter. These include Lockheed, Boeing, IBM, General Motors, Exxon,
 General Electric and Texaco (13). The only objective of the anti-corruption
 campaigns taken up by international organisations (World Bank, IMF, OECD)
 is the "good governance" of a financial crime that is now an integral part
 of market globalisation under the leadership of the American democracy, the
 most corrupt on the planet.

 The headlong rush for profits and capital accumulation by any means is
 reflected in the widespread robbery of the fruits of men's labour and of
 common wealth and the moral corruption of the ruling classes. The robber
 barons are giving way to the pillaging princes.

 * Globalisation Observatory

 (1) Znet Commentary, a Canadian site, offers a ranking of the top 100
 criminal firms.

 (2) On free zones, see Le Monde diplomatique, English edition, March 1998.

 (3) Over 40,000 lobbyists in Washington, thousands in Brussels, hundreds at
 the WTO.

 (4) $5,250bn in 1998.

 (5) The central banks' official reserves totalled $1,636bn at the end of
 1998 (source: 1999 Report of the Bank for International Settlements).

 (6) New York (New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq), Tokyo, Chicago and
 London total $20,000bn (source: International Federation of Stock
Exchanges).

 (7) $1bn in $100 bills stacked up would be 1,000m high.

 (8) $650bn in 1998, $450bn in 1997 (source: 1998 Report of the United
 Nations Conference on Trade and Development - Unctad).

 (9) In particular the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), which works with
 banks to prevent financial crime and has been churning out recommendations
 for ten years.

 (10) The most recent concerns the OECD convention on combating bribery of
 foreign public officials.

 (11) The European Council meeting in Tempere, Finland, in October 1999
 decided to strengthen Europol's powers and to create Eurojust as a test bed
 for a future European public prosecutor's office.

 (12) See Denis Robert, La Justice ou le Chaos, Stock, Paris, 1996.

 (13) Le Canard enchaîné, 3 November 1999.

 Translated by Malcolm Greenwood



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