Posted By Khadija Sharife Share

Tax havens are at the heart of the corruption that is sucking the continent dry.

By Khadija Sharife

When we hear the words "rogue state," we tend to think of the Burmas and Guineas of the world - countries ruled by despotic leaders who oppress their people through militarized rule. We don't tend to imagine bucolic mountain pastures populated by cud-chewing cattle, or pristine lakefront cities teeming with international businessmen in smartly pressed, charcoal-gray suits.

Maybe the comparison is a little over the top. But one could nonetheless make a strong case that Switzerland - or, for that matter, Britain, home to more than a quarter of the world's tax havens -- belongs in the category of countries whose unwillingness to follow international norms has harmful spillover effects around the world.

Take Africa, whose poverty is often portrayed as the inevitable product of history and geography. Africa has immense natural riches; they've just been sucked dry by wealthy individuals and multinationals who rely on countries with lax tax regulations and excessive traditions of secrecy to disguise the full extent of their earnings. In other words, Jersey, the Cayman Islands, and other tax havens and offshore financial centers are at the heart of Africa's resource curse.

The numbers are staggering. Each year, more than $1 trillion exits developing countries, and more than $140 billion of comes from Africa. That's almost four times as much as the continent gets in official development aid. Sub-Saharan Africa may be the world's poorest region, but it's also its leading net creditor.

The key players in this shadow economy are corporations. Globally, more than 60 percent of capital flight comes from multinationals operating in resource-rich regions. Here's how it works: Instead of declaring profits where they earn them, companies use a mechanism called transfer pricing, wherein internal corporate revenues are "moved" from one part of a company to another. Each year, African countries lose billions in tax revenue to home countries or tax havens as a result. Meanwhile, instruments such as "tax competition" designed in theory to attract foreign direct investment, are primarily utilized in practice by corporations seeking to exploit finite natural resources.

African officials, of course, are often complicit in this organized theft. Equatorial Guinea stores $2 billion worth of oil revenue offshore, according to the IMF, some of which was likely used to buy the $35 million Malibu mansion purchased by the country's president in 2006. Still, compared with the scale of capital flight, the infamous corruption of African officials is pennies, amounting to just 3 to 5 percent of the billions exiting Africa.

Watchdog groups like Transparency International (TI), self-described as the ‘leading global organization devoted to combating corruption,' have yet to hold tax havens account for the pernicious impact they have on the developing world. Switzerland, the recipient of one third of global capital flight, ranks fifth-best in the world on TI's latest Corruption Perception Index.

Nor are wealthy countries adequately focused on the problem. The G-20's London summit, which saw British Prime Minister Gordon Brown boldly declare, "The era of banking secrecy is over," was a good start. But G-20 leaders, focused on tax evasion in their countries, failed to notice that the developing world loses an estimated $385 billion to tax abuse annually. They failed to call for country-by-country reporting or mandatory automatic exchanges of information about where corporate profits are going. Nor were there any calls to recover and return the estimated $11.5 trillion currently stashed in tax havens dotting the globe. Instead, the G-20 countries proposed bilateral tax arrangements related to "suspected" tax evasion, and this, on "request" only. Good luck getting complicit African governments to turn on their multinational partners.

For Africa, the era of banking secrecy is far from over.

Khadija Sharife is an investigative journalist, researcher with the Tax Justice Network and a visiting scholar at the Center for Civil Society in South Africa.

Photo: FABRICE COFFRINI/AFP/Getty Images

 

FRANKLYNE OGBUNWEZEH

9:25 AM ET

May 12, 2009

Africa's crises is a leadership induced socio-pathology

African poverty remains a failure of leadership. History and geography are contributory factors, but history and geography can be transcended and deployed as a launch pad for development, where the political will exists. Kemal Atarturk single handedly launched the derelict Ottomann Empire on the path to becoming modern Turkey. India and Singapore, all of which where colonies have been able to shake off their colonial legacies and are marching confidently into the future.

African sociopolitics is a socio-pathological theatre, where indentured roguery meets civic timidity of the populace. Many African leaders are not only grotesquely incompetent; they are inglorious and visionless bandits, whose sole ambition in power is to satiate their lewd avarice; stealing as much as they can and bankrupting the state in the process. The electorate have been conditioned like Pavlovian dogs to feed themselves of the curds of ignorance, superstition and timidity.

What do we expect from the West, when our leadership has packaged our futures and brought it to the auction block for sale? African followership is equally not helping matters. With the populace still in the thraldom of ignorance, superstition and timidity, the leaders have no compunctions in conniving with foreign interests to dupe their countries.

A mixture of the West’s trade in hypocrisy; which some choose to call neo-colonialism and visionless oscillations of a rogue leadership remain the pivot of Africa’s contemporary predicament and developmental crises. History showed that when the clamour for independence became unbearable; and the resources to continue pacifying colonies became exorbitant, the colonial masters decided to grant quasi-independence to their milk-cows of colonies. Policies were put in place, which mortgaged the continent’s future by granting powers to the conservative elements; local pirates appointed and trained by the masters in a Pavlovian scheme gone awry. Since then, these pirates have continued to clone themselves in power, and Africa has continued to bleed her resources into foreign coffers.

This ancient trade of stealing Africa’s resources has not ended, it now has more prominent African participants; and attracts more brazen hypocrisy from the establishments of profit ruling our world today. That is what globalization has been all along.

With the present crop and system of leadership we have across Africa today, Africa will never matriculate into developmental felicity. Visionlessness has never been a driver of progress.