This week Global Financial Integrity released its latest
report on illicit financial flows from developing countries,
including data for 2009. The result: despite a drop in 2009
due to the recession, developing countries lost between
US$723 billion and US$844 billion per annum on average
through illicit flows over the decade ending 2009. In
current dollar terms, the flows increased in current dollar
terms by 15.19% per annum from US$386 billion at the start
of the decade to US$903 billion in 2009.
This AfricaFocus Bulletin includes the "tip sheet" summary
by Global Financial Integrity of the new report, and a blog
post by one of the researchers highlighting the results for
Ethiopia in particular. Although only Nigeria and South
Africa rank among the top twenty countries worldwide in
illicit financial flows (8th and 19th respectively), and
sub-Saharan Africa accounted for only 4.5% of illicit
financial flows worldwide, such flows from Africa were still
large in comparison to the size of African economies, as
illustrated by the Ethiopia case included.
Another AfricaFocus Bulletin sent out today by e-mail, and
available on the web at http://www.africafocus.org/docs11/cap1112.php, provides
excerpts from a new book by two of the pioneering
researchers on this topic, Léonce Ndikumana and James Boyce,
with additional background on the methodologies used for
such estimates.
While such data estimating the scale of such illicit
financial flows are increasingly available, actually
recovering or reversing such flows requires fundamental
reforms in international accounting standards, as stressed
by Global Financial Integrity and, increasingly, prominent
organizations such as the World Bank as well. High on the
agenda are steps such as requirements for reporting on
beneficial ownership of bank accounts and for country-by-
country reporting by multinational corporations on their
operations and taxes paid.
This AfricaFocus Bulletin also contains an excerpt from a
recent report by Eurodad, outlining the need and the
potential for reforms by European countries in particular.
In December 2008, Global Financial Integrity (GFI) released
"Illicit Financial Flows from Developing Countries:
2002-2006," a groundbreaking report which used World Bank
and IMF data to estimate the quantity and patterns of
illicit financial flows coming out of developing countries.
The original report found that illicit financial flows out
of developing countries were approximately US$1.06 trillion
in 2006.
In January 2011, GFI updated its 2008 study with its report,
"Illicit Financial Flows from Developing Countries: 2000-
2009," which included illicit financial flow data over the
time period 2000-2008 and incorporated predictions for the
year 2009. The January 2011 report found that illicit
financial flows increased from US$1.06 trillion in 2006 to
approximately US$1.44 trillion in 2008.
Updating its 2008 and January 2011 reports, GFI is now
releasing illicit financial flows data for the year 2009 and
updating existing figures based on new data.
Adjusted for inflation, annual illicit financial flow growth
by region over the decade was:
Conservatively estimated, Asia accounted for 44.9 percent
of total illicit flows from the developing world followed
by the Middle East and North Africa (18.6 percent),
developing Europe (16.7 percent), the Western Hemisphere
(15.3 percent), and Sub-Saharan Africa (4.5 percent).
Please refer to Table 5 in the Appendix for full rankings of
countries by average annual outflows.
The illicit outflows measured in this report are
approximately 7-10 times the amount of official development
assistance (ODA) going into developing countries. This means
that for every $1 in economic development assistance which
goes into a developing country, several dollars are lost via
these illicit outflows.
Increasing transparency in the global financial system is
critical to reducing the outflow of illicit money from
developing countries.
Recommendations for achieving greater transparency:
- Curtail trade mispricing.
- Require country-by-country reporting of sales, profits and
taxes paid by multinational corporations.
- Require confirmation of beneficial ownership in all
banking and securities accounts.
- Require automatic cross-border exchange of tax information
on personal and business accounts.
- Harmonize predicate offenses [the underlying criminal
offenses] under anti-money laundering laws across all
Financial Action Task Force cooperating countries.
Illegal Ethiopian Capital Flight Skyrocketed in 2009 to
US$3.26 Billion
December 5, 2011
By Sarah Freitas
Task Force on Financial Integrity & International
Development
http://www.financialtaskforce.org
Sarah Freitas is an Economist at Global Financial Integrity
in Washington, DC and a co-author of "Illicit Financial
Flows from Developing Countries over the Decade Ending
2009," a December 2011 report from GFI.
An upcoming report by Global Financial Integrity finds that
Ethiopia, which has a per-capita GDP of just US$365, lost
US$11.7 billion to illicit financial outflows between 2000
and 2009. More worrying is that the study shows Ethiopia's
losses due to illicit capital flows are on the rise. In
2009, illicit money leaving the economy totaled US$3.26
billion, which is double the amount in each of the two
previous years.
The report, titled Illicit Financial Flows from Developing
Countries over the Decade Ending 2009, shows that the vast
majority of the rise in illicit financial flows is a result
of increased corruption, kickbacks, and bribery while the
remainder stems from trade mispricing.
Ethiopia is one of the poorest countries on earth. Plagued
by famine, war, and political oppression, 38.9% of
Ethiopians live in poverty, and life expectancy in 2009 was
just 58 years. In 2008, Ethiopia received US$829 million in
official development assistance, but this was swamped by the
massive illicit outflows. The scope of Ethiopia's capital
flight is so severe that our conservative US$3.26 billion
estimate greatly exceeds the US$2 billion value of
Ethiopia's total exports in 2009.
The people of Ethiopia are being bled dry. No matter how
hard they try to fight their way out of absolute destitution
and poverty, they will be swimming upstream against the
current of illicit capital leakage. The global shadow
financial system happily absorbs money that corrupt public
officials, tax evaders, and abusive multi-national
corporations siphon away from the Ethiopian people.
What can be done? The first step the international community
should take is to hamper the ability of corrupt and taxevading
Ethiopians to launder their money in the global
financial system. This could be accomplished by establishing
a global system of automatic exchange of tax information. In
this way, Ethiopian authorities could much more easily track
the bank accounts their tax evaders have established around
the world. Furthermore, the G20 governments could push for
an end to shell companies by calling for beneficial owners
of all companies, trusts and foundations to be known to
government authorities. This would make it far more
difficult for the corrupt and the criminal to hide their
ill-gotten gains behind a wall of corporate secrecy.
These two measures would immediately curtail the flow of
billions of dollars leaving the country each year. And, by
preventing the flow of so much money, countless lives will
benefit.
Exposing the lost billions: How financial transparency by
multinationals on a country by country basis can aid
development
21 November 2011
European Network on Debt and Development
http://www.eurodad.org/whatsnew/reports.aspx?id=4720
The international community has repeatedly stressed the need
to mobilise domestic resources in developing countries, as
the most sustainable way of financing development and ending
aid dependency. Yet, many developing countries are affected
by a number of challenges that limit their capacity to
collect taxes. One such challenge is multinational
companies' lack of accountability regarding their operations
and more specifically regarding the taxes they pay. This
report explains how the cross border nature of multinational
companies' operations combined with the absence of adequate
transparency regulations have very damaging implications for
a country's ability to mobilise domestic resources. Although
this is relevant for both developed and developing
countries, the report focuses on the impacts for developing
countries, which have weaker capacities to face this
challenge.
Section 2 of the report describes the problem of illicit
financial flows with a specific focus on those stemming from
tax dodging by multinational companies (MNCs) which account
for more than half of the total estimated illicit financial
flows from developing countries. Companies use subsidiaries
located in tax havens in order to dismantle the added value
they are producing, concentrating their profits in tax
havens and current accounting rules allow them to obscure
this.
Section 3 of the report analyses the existing regulatory
framework for MNCs financial transparency. It explains
current regulatory initiatives on country-by-country
reporting in the extractive sector such as the Extractive
Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI), and the recent
stock exchange reporting regulations in the US and in Hong
Kong. It explains why the civil society proposal for full
country-by-country reporting, contributes to addressing tax
dodging by MNCs, which the current regulatory initiatives
fail to do.
Section 4 focuses on the European agenda, it shows that
implementing ambitious standards is a matter of political
will. The review of the transparency and the accounting
directives in 2011 and 2012 provide a unique opportunity to
make real progress by proposing ambitious measures on
country-by-country disclosure requirements for European
companies. The European Union also has a key role to play by
pushing this within the G20, OECD and International
Accounting Standards Board (IASB). Section 5 outlines civil
society's proposal for a truly effective country-by-country
reporting that would contribute to address MNC tax dodging.
Section 6 shows that such country-by-country reporting is
feasible and is also desirable for a wide range of
stakeholders including CSOs, tax administrations and
investors. It provides statements from investors arguing in
favour of this disclosure.
Part 2 of the report develops in detail two case studies of
companies operating in developing countries the brewery
SABMiller, operating in Ghana and Swiss mining company
Glencore operating in Zambia. These examples show how
country-by-country reporting would have enabled the
identification of illegal and ethically questionable tax
practices that deprive developing countries of much needed
tax revenues.
Excerpts from Part 1: What Taxation and Transparency Matter
for Development
Taxation is essential to development. Tax is necessary for a
state to raise predictable revenues, redistribute income and
provide infrastructure and basic services such as health and
education to its citizens. Taxation also strengthens
democracy and government's accountability to its citizens.
As citizens demand their taxes are spent wisely and for
their benefit this leads to greater public participation in
a country's political process.
While governments in countries that are members of the
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD) tend to raise around 35 % of GDP in taxes, the
proportion of tax to GDP is much lower in developing
countries (see chart below). In sub-Saharan Africa, the
percentage of tax revenue to GDP increased from less than
15% in 1980 to a little over 18 % in 2005. However, this
rise was due almost exclusively to the increase in revenues
stemming from natural resources.1 Despite their volatility,
natural resources revenues can generate substantial tax
income for developing countries. For this reason,
governments and civil society organisations (CSOs) have
particularly emphasised the need of better revenues
management in this area.
Why do developing countries gather fewer taxes?
Many developing countries are affected by a number of
domestic challenges that limit their capacity to collect
taxes, including the following:2
- Revenue authorities are often weak, which makes some types
of tax unfeasible to levy, and reduces the effectiveness
with which those that are levied are collected;
- tax legislation is drafted in ways that makes it hard to
enforce - for example lack of specificity in the area of
transfer pricing;
- reluctance to challenge political influence of larger tax
payers undermines the fairness and effectiveness of the
overall tax mix - for example in the areas of land value
taxation and tax incentives for foreign investors;
- the size of the informal sector makes monitoring of
economic activities and the collection of taxes a huge
challenge;
- they are ill-equipped to monitor and effectively tax
international financial flows;
- in some cases there is corruption in governments and tax
authorities, undermining trust and diminishing the
incentives for citizens to pay tax.
But developing countries do not make such decisions in a
vacuum. They face external pressures to adopt policies that
are not always in the interests of their poorest citizens:
- Conditionalities and advice attached to grants and loans
in the last few decades have often encouraged countries to
shift the burden of taxation away from large corporations
and onto ordinary citizens4;
- tax competition pushes countries to lower tax rates and
offer tax holidays and exemptions in the hope of attracting
foreign investment;
- developing countries' capacities to negotiate fair deals
with big companies are often weak, as some of the biggest
multinational companies (MNCs) have more power and global
influence than many of the countries in which they operate5;
- MNCs' lack of effective accountability regarding their
operations and the taxes they pay. This report will focus on
this particular concern, which is exacerbated by limited
international cooperation in tax matters and the lack of
participation of developing countries in (or indeed their
direct exclusion from) international fora where tax matters
are discussed.
In addition, lack of transparency facilitates corruption.
Opacity surrounding the operations of MNCs and the taxes
they pay means that companies can easily avoid or evade
taxes. Financial secrecy in tax havens makes it easy for
individuals and companies to hide financial activities from
governments around the world and especially from illequipped
tax administrations in developing countries.
Curbing cross border illicit capital flight is therefore a
crucial part of the jigsaw when seeking to boost domestic
resource mobilisation as a predictable source of development
finance.
Why is corporate transparency needed?
The first and most obvious reason relates to the scale of
multinational operations and their importance for the
global economy. While the scale of operations in a
particular developing country is often minor for these
companies, the significance for the host countries'
economies can be huge. An example of this is that in 2010,
the combined revenues of the world's 10 largest companies
exceed the combined GDP of India and Brazil. This is also
true for developed countries. In 2010, revenues of the 50
leading European companies accounted for 22% of the
European Union's GDP.
The massive volumes of trade occurring within companies but
across borders creates enormous complexities for taxation.
This is especially the case for trade in intangible products
and services, on which information is scarce, but which has
a huge impact on companies' tax bills. The extensive use of
tax havens in these transactions makes it very hard to
measure the impact of transfer pricing8 on the distribution
of taxable profits within multinational enterprises, because
one cannot see how much profit is distributed to tax havens.
As developing countries begin to adopt global transfer
pricing standards, there is an urgent need to understand
this impact.
An NGO investigation analysed the 50 largest European
corporations' annual reports and found that at least 21% of
their subsidiaries are located in tax havens.9 Similarly,
another NGO study showed that 98 of the FTSE100 largest
companies in the London Stock Exchange have subsidiaries in
tax havens.10 As a result, there is a complete disconnection
between the geography of MNCs' real economic activities and
the story they tell in their financial accounts. Companies
use subsidiaries located in tax havens in order to dismantle
the added value they are producing, concentrating their
profits in tax havens. Although this is very difficult to
track given the lack of available information, recent
investigations - such as the cases explained in part two of
this report, show that disclosure of financial information
on a country-by-country basis would shed light on such tax
dodging schemes.
Such complexities also create power asymmetries: MNCs with
expertise and resources can easily exploit this system to
their own advantage, while developing countries11 struggle
to monitor and stand up to companies. Even where countries
do have the capacity to challenge companies, they may be
reluctant to make life difficult for foreign investors.
Another reason relates to social factors such as tax morale
(the willingness of citizens to pay tax) which are strongly
affected by the perception of equity in the system.12 In
order to change a culture of nonpayment of tax, a perception
that the big players are paying their fair share becomes
crucially important.
Finally, it is a matter of mutual accountability. On the one
side developing countries make efforts to provide a
legislative framework under which companies can operate
efficiently. On the other side, corporations are meant to
provide benefits to the country, including the creation of
jobs, development of infrastructure, and fair payment of
revenue to governments. Yet, while real pressure is put on
developing countries' side, including by international
financial institutions in order to improve the ease of doing
business, when it comes to the other side of the equation,
companies remain largely free to set the rules.
In this report we argue that a number of challenges faced by
developing countries, such as the fact that they are not
getting a fair tax return to MNCs, could be addressed by the
implementation of full country-by-country reporting:
At the country level, country-by- country reporting would
help promote a public debate within countries, in the
absence of local accounting regulations that would put the
subsidiary accounts in the public domain. But it would only
pose questions, not answer them. The debate would be about:
- The effectiveness of the revenue authority in securing
companies' compliance.
- The effectiveness of national taxation rules, especially
on transfer pricing and tax incentives.
At the global level, a country-by-country reporting standard
would:
- Provide a global picture of a company's activities. It
would give tax inspectors in developing countries much more
to go on when investigating companies, including indications
of where they need to investigate. Even with the information
they can get from tax information exchange agreements
(TIEAs) and transfer pricing documentation rules, tax
authorities cannot find out as much as they say they would
like to about the fellow subsidiaries of companies they are
investigating.
- Help illustrate the distribution of profits and tax
revenues that results from the current transfer pricing
system. This is important information that would help
stakeholders - including CSOs - to evaluate the impact of
the current transfer pricing rules on developing
countries14. At present nobody is able to study this.
Requiring companies to report their financial activities on
a country-by-country basis is a crucial step that should be
taken at the international level to help both developed and
developing countries monitor the activities of companies
operating within their borders and challenge abusive
behavior.
The European Union has a key role to play by pushing this
within the G20, OECD and International Accounting Standards
Board (IASB) but also by implementing measures at the
European level. The review of the transparency and the
accounting directives in 2011 and 2012 provides a unique
opportunity to make real progress by proposing ambitious
measures on country-by-country disclosure requirements for
European companies.
What needs to be done?
Eurodad and many other CSOs in Europe and other regions of
the world support the idea of "country-by-country reporting
disclosure" of the following information in MNCs' annual
financial statements:
1 The name of each country in which it operates;
2 The names of all companies belonging to it, trading in
each country in which it operates;
3 Its financial performance in each country in which it
operates, without exception, including:
- Its sales, both third party and with other group
companies;
- Purchases, split between third parties and intra-group
transactions;
- Labour costs and employee numbers;
- Financing costs split between those paid to third parties
and to other group members;
- Its pre-tax profit;
4 The tax charge included in its accounts for the country in
question, as indicated below;
5 Details of the cost and net book value of its physical
fixed assets located in each country;
6 Details of its gross and net assets in total for each
country in which it operates.
Tax information would need to be analysed in more depth,
requiring disclosure of the following for each country in
which the corporation operates:
1 The tax charge for the year split between current and
deferred tax;
2 The actual tax payments made to the government of the
country in the period;
3 The liabilities (and assets, if relevant) owing for tax
and equivalent charges at the beginning and end of each
accounting period;
4 Deferred taxation liabilities for the country at the
start and close of each accounting period.
AfricaFocus Bulletin is an independent electronic
publication providing reposted commentary and analysis on
African issues, with a particular focus on U.S. and
international policies. AfricaFocus Bulletin is edited by
William Minter.
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