Money Laundering in A Changed World

By: Dr. Sam Vaknin


Also published by United Press International (UPI) 

Israel has always turned a blind eye to the origin of funds 
deposited by Jews from South Africa to Russia. In Britain it is 
perfectly legal to hide the true ownership of a company. Underpaid 
Asian bank clerks on immigrant work permits in the Gulf states 
rarely require identity documents from the mysterious and well-
connected owners of multi-million dollar deposits. Hawaladars 
continue plying their paperless and trust-based trade - the transfer 
of billions of US dollars around the world. American and Swiss banks 
collaborate with dubious correspondent banks in off shore centres. 
Multinationals shift money through tax free territories in what is 
euphemistically known as "tax planning". Internet gambling outfits 
and casinos serve as fronts for narco-dollars. British Bureaux de 
Change launder up to 2.6 billion British pounds annually. The 500 
Euro note will make it much easier to smuggle cash out of Europe. A 
French parliamentary committee accuses the City of London of being a 
money laundering haven in a 400 page report. Intelligence services 
cover the tracks of covert operations by opening accounts in obscure 
tax havens, from Cyprus to Nauru. Money laundering, its venues and 
techniques, are an integral part of the economic fabric of the 
world. Business as usual?

Not really. In retrospect, as far as money laundering goes, 
September 11 may be perceived as a watershed as important as the 
precipitous collapse of communism in 1989. Both events have forever 
altered the patterns of the global flows of illicit capital.

What is Money Laundering?

Strictly speaking, money laundering is the age-old process of 
disguising the illegal origin and criminal nature of funds (obtained 
in sanctions-busting arms sales, smuggling, trafficking in humans, 
organized crime, drug trafficking, prostitution rings, embezzlement, 
insider trading, bribery, and computer fraud) by moving them 
untraceably and investing them in legitimate businesses, securities, 
or bank deposits. But this narrow definition masks the fact that the 
bulk of money laundered is the result of tax evasion, tax avoidance, 
and outright tax fraud, such as the "VAT carousel scheme" in the EU 
(moving goods among businesses in various jurisdictions to 
capitalize on differences in VAT rates). Tax-related laundering nets 
between 10-20 billion US dollars annually from France and Russia 
alone. The confluence of criminal and tax averse funds in money 
laundering networks serves to obscure the sources of both.

The Scale of the Problem

According to a 1996 IMF estimate, money laundered annually amounts 
to 2-5% of world GDP (between 800 billion and 2 trillion US dollars 
in today's terms). The lower figure is considerably larger than an 
average European economy, such as Spain's.

The System

It is important to realize that money laundering takes place within 
the banking system. Big amounts of cash are spread among numerous 
accounts (sometimes in free economic zones, financial off shore 
centers, and tax havens), converted to bearer financial instruments 
(money orders, bonds), or placed with trusts and charities. The 
money is then transferred to other locations, sometimes as bogus 
payments for "goods and services" against fake or inflated invoices 
issued by holding companies owned by lawyers or accountants on 
behalf of unnamed beneficiaries. The transferred funds are re- assembled
in their destination and often "shipped" back to the point 
of origin under a new identity. The laundered funds are then 
invested in the legitimate economy. It is a simple procedure - yet 
an effective one. It results in either no paper trail - or too much 
of it. The accounts are invariably liquidated and all traces erased. 

Why is it a Problem?

Criminal and tax evading funds are idle and non-productive. Their 
injection, however surreptitiously, into the economy transforms them 
into a productive (and cheap) source of capital. Why is this 
negative? 

Because it corrupts government officials, banks and their officers, 
contaminates legal sectors of the economy, crowds out legitimate and 
foreign capital, makes money supply unpredictable and 
uncontrollable, and increases cross-border capital movements, 
thereby enhancing the volatility of exchange rates. 

A multilateral, co-ordinated, effort (exchange of information, 
uniform laws, extra-territorial legal powers) is required to counter 
the international dimensions of money laundering. Many countries opt 
in because money laundering has also become a domestic political and 
economic concern. The United Nations, the Bank for International 
Settlements, the OECD's FATF, the EU, the Council of Europe, the 
Organisation of American States, all published anti-money laundering 
standards. Regional groupings were formed (or are being established) 
in the Caribbean, Asia, Europe, southern Africa, western Africa, and 
Latin America.

Money Laundering in the Wake of the September 11 Attacks

Regulation

The least important trend is the tightening of financial regulations 
and the establishment or enhancement of compulsory (as opposed to 
industry or voluntary) regulatory and enforcement agencies. 

New legislation in the US which amounts to extending the powers of 
the CIA domestically and of the DOJ extra-territorially, was rather 
xenophobically described by a DOJ official, Michael Chertoff, as 
intended to "make sure the American banking system does not become a 
haven for foreign corrupt leaders or other kinds of foreign 
organized criminals." Privacy and bank secrecy laws have been 
watered down. Collaboration with off shore "shell" banks has been 
banned. Business with clients of correspondent banks was curtailed. 
Banks were effectively transformed into law enforcement agencies, 
responsible to verify both the identities of their (foreign) clients 
and the source and origin of their funds. Cash transactions were 
partly criminalized. And the securities and currency trading 
industry, insurance companies, and money transfer services are 
subjected to growing scrutiny as a conduit for "dirty cash". 

Still, such legislation is highly ineffective. The American Bankers' 
Association puts the cost of compliance with the laxer anti-money-
laundering laws in force in 1998 at 10 billion US dollars - or more 
than 10 million US dollars per obtained conviction. Even when the 
system does work, critical alerts drown in the torrent of reports 
mandated by the regulations. One bank actually reported a suspicious 
transaction in the account of one of the September 11 hijackers - 
only to be ignored.

The Treasury Department established Operation Green Quest, an 
investigative team charged with monitoring charities, NGO's, credit 
card fraud, cash smuggling, counterfeiting, and the Hawala networks. 
This is not without precedent. Previous teams tackled drug money, 
the biggest money laundering venue ever, BCCI (Bank of Credit and 
Commerce International), and ... Al Capone. The more veteran, New- York
based, El-Dorado anti money laundering Task Force (established 
in 1992) will lend a hand and share information. 

More than 150 countries promised to co-operate with the US in its 
fight against the financing of terrorism - 81 of which (including 
the Bahamas, Argentina, Kuwait, Indonesia, Pakistan, Switzerland, 
and the EU) actually froze assets of suspicious individuals, 
suspected charities, and dubious firms, or passed new anti money 
laundering laws and stricter regulations (the Philippines, the UK, 
Germany). A tabled EU directive would force lawyers to disclose 
incriminating information about their clients' money laundering 
activities. Pakistan initiated a "loyalty scheme", awarding 
expatriates who prefer official bank channels to the much maligned 
(but cheaper and more efficient) Hawala, with extra baggage 
allowance and special treatment in airports.

The magnitude of this international collaboration is unprecedented. 
But this burst of solidarity may yet fade. China, for instance, 
refuses to chime in. As a result, the statement issued by APEC last 
week on measures to stem the finances of terrorism was lukewarm at 
best. And, protestations of close collaboration to the contrary, 
Saudi Arabia has done nothing to combat money laundering "Islamic 
charities" (of which it is proud) on its territory.

Still, a universal code is emerging, based on the work of the OECD's 
FATF (Financial Action Task Force) since 1989 (its famous "40 
recommendations") and on the relevant UN conventions. All countries 
are expected by the West, on pain of possible sanctions, to adopt a 
uniform legal platform (including reporting on suspicious 
transactions and freezing assets) and to apply it to all types of 
financial intermediaries, not only to banks. This is likely to 
result in ...

The decline of off shore financial centres and tax havens

By far the most important outcome of this new-fangled juridical 
homogeneity is the acceleration of the decline of off shore 
financial and banking centres and tax havens. The distinction 
between off-shore and on-shore will vanish. Of the FATF's "name and 
shame" blacklist of 19 "black holes" (poorly regulated territories, 
including Israel, Indonesia, and Russia) - 11 have substantially 
revamped their banking laws and financial regulators. Coupled with 
the tightening of US, UK, and EU laws and the wider interpretation 
of money laundering to include political corruption, bribery, and 
embezzlement - this would make life a lot more difficult for venal 
politicians and major tax evaders. The likes of Sani Abacha (late 
President of Nigeria), Ferdinand Marcos (late President of the 
Philippines), Vladimiro Montesinos (former, now standing trial, 
chief of the intelligence services of Peru), or Raul Salinas (the 
brother of Mexico's President) - would have found it impossible to 
loot their countries to the same disgraceful extent in today's 
financial environment. And Osama bin Laden would not have been able 
to wire funds to US accounts from the Sudanese Al Shamal Bank, 
the "correspondent" of 33 American banks.

Quo Vadis, Money Laundering?

Crime is resilient and fast adapting to new realities. Organized 
crime is in the process of establishing an alternative banking 
system, only tangentially connected to the West's, in the fringes, 
and by proxy. This is done by purchasing defunct banks or banking 
licences in territories with lax regulation, cash economies, corrupt 
politicians, no tax collection, but reasonable infrastructure. The 
countries of Eastern Europe - Yugoslavia (Montenegro and Serbia), 
Macedonia, Ukraine, Moldova, Belarus, Albania, to mention a few - 
are natural targets. In some cases, organized crime is so all- pervasive
and local politicians so corrupt that the distinction 
between criminal and politician is spurious. 

Gradually, money laundering rings move their operations to these 
new, accommodating territories. The laundered funds are used to 
purchase assets in intentionally botched privatizations, real 
estate, existing businesses, and to finance trading operations. The 
wasteland that is Eastern Europe craves private capital and no 
questions are asked by investor and recipient alike.

The next frontier is cyberspace. Internet banking, Internet 
gambling, day trading, foreign exchange cyber transactions, e-cash, 
e-commerce, fictitious invoicing of the launderer's genuine credit 
cards - hold the promise of the future. Impossible to track and 
monitor, ex-territorial, totally digital, amenable to identity theft 
and fake identities - this is the ideal vehicle for money 
launderers. This nascent platform is way too small to accommodate 
the enormous amounts of cash laundered daily - but in ten years 
time, it may. The problems is likely to be exacerbated by the 
introduction of smart cards, electronic purses, and payment-enabled 
mobile phones.

In its "Report on Money Laundering Typologies" (February 2001) the 
FATF was able to document concrete and suspected abuses of online 
banking, Internet casinos, and web-based financial services. It is 
difficult to identify a customer and to get to know it in 
cyberspace, was the alarming conclusion. It is equally complicated 
to establish jurisdiction.

Many capable professionals - stockbrokers, lawyers, accountants, 
traders, insurance brokers, real estate agents, sellers of high 
value items such as gold, diamonds, and art - are employed or co- opted
by money laundering operations. Money launderers are likely to 
make increased use of global, around the clock, trading in foreign 
currencies and derivatives. These provide instantaneous transfer of 
funds and no audit trail. The underlying securities involved are 
susceptible to market manipulation and fraud. Complex insurance 
policies (with the "wrong" beneficiaries), and the securitization of 
receivables, leasing contracts, mortgages, and low grade bonds are 
already used in money laundering schemes. In general, money 
laundering goes well with risk arbitraging financial instruments.

Trust-based, globe-spanning, money transfer systems based on 
authentication codes and generations of commercial relationships 
cemented in honour and blood - are another wave of the future. The 
Hawala and Chinese networks in Asia, the Black Market Peso Exchange 
(BMPE) in Latin America, other evolving courier systems in Eastern 
Europe (mainly in Russia, Ukraine, and Albania) and in Western 
Europe (mainly in France and Spain). In conjunction with encrypted e-
mail and web anonymizers, these networks are virtually impenetrable. 
As emigration increases, diasporas established, and transport and 
telecommunications become ubiquitous, "ethnic banking" along the 
tradition of the Lombards and the Jews in medieval Europe may become 
the the preferred venue of money laundering. September 11 may have 
retarded world civilization in more than one way.


Sam Vaknin, Ph.D.
United Press International (UPI) Senior Business Correspondent
+389-70-565-488, +389-2-214-281 (also fax)
E-mail : [EMAIL PROTECTED] OR (as backup)  [EMAIL PROTECTED]

http://ceeandbalkan.tripod.com/

Issues in the economics and politics of economies in transition

http://samvak.tripod.com/guide.html

Conflicts and Transition

http://www.intellnet.org/topics/balkans/

Intelligence Network Balkan Topic Centre

http://www.ce-review.org/authorarchives/vaknin_archive/vaknin_main.html

Author Archive of Political Columns in "Central Europe Review"

http://after.cjb.net

(Buy "After the Rain - How the West Lost the East")
 

Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to
http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/ 





                                       Serbian News Network - SNN
                                           [EMAIL PROTECTED]
                                        http://www.antic.org/

Reply via email to