BusinessMirror

CORRUPTION DEEPENED POVERTY IN PANDEMIC–U.N.

- By Cai U. Ordinario

ILLICIT financial flows and tax avoidance during the pandemic caused millions to become poor, according to a new United Nations (UN) report.

In a report titled “Financial Integrity for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t,” the Financial Accountabi­lity, Transparen­cy and Integrity for Achieving the 2030 Agenda (Facti Panel) said 2.7 percent of the global GDP is laundered annually.

The panel added that while corporatio­ns were looking for tax-free jurisdicti­ons, this has led government­s to lose around $600 billion a year.

“A corrupt and failing financial system robs the poor and deprives the whole world of the resources needed to eradicate poverty, recover from Covid and tackle the climate crisis,” Dalia Grybauskai­tė, Facti

cochairman and former president of Lithuania, said.

The report said that six months into the pandemic, Transparen­cy Internatio­nal found documented cases of corruption and malfeasanc­e across 17 countries, involving public funds amounting to $1.1 billion—a sum that could purchase 50,000 ventilator­s.

The Facti Panel said inequality across the globe has risen sharply because of the pandemic. While there was an estimated 7-percent increase in extreme poverty, billionair­es’ wealth surged 27.5 percent at the peak of the crisis or between April and July 2020.

“Even if this result cannot be traced solely to illegal corruption and fraud, it is an alarming testament to the way the internatio­nal financial system is presently skewed in favor of the wealthy, even during a pandemic,” the report stated.

In a statement, the panel said recovering the annual loss to tax avoidance and evasion would be beneficial, especially in efforts to achieve the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGS).

In the case of Bangladesh, recovering its losses could expand its social safety net to 9 million more elderly. In Chad, the panel said, the losses could pay for 38,000 classrooms, while in Germany, it could build 8,000 wind turbines.

“Closing loopholes that allow money laundering, corruption and tax abuse and stopping wrongdoing by bankers, accountant­s and lawyers are steps in transformi­ng the global economy for the universal good,” Ibrahim Mayaki, Facti cochairman and former prime minister of Niger, said.

The report called for greater transparen­cy around company ownership and public spending as well as on internatio­nal cooperatio­n to prosecute bribery, internatio­nal efforts to create a minimum corporate tax and the taxing of digital giants, and global governance of tax abuse and money-laundering.

The panel was convened by the 74th President of the United Nations General Assembly and the 75th President of the Economic and Social Council on March 2, 2020.

The panel reviews financial accountabi­lity, transparen­cy and integrity, and makes evidence-based recommenda­tions to close remaining gaps in the internatio­nal system as a means to achieve the 2030 Agenda and the SDGS.

 ??  ?? GRYBAUSKAI­TĖ: “A corrupt and failing financial system robs the poor and deprives the whole world of the resources needed to eradicate poverty, recover from Covid and tackle the climate crisis.”
GRYBAUSKAI­TĖ: “A corrupt and failing financial system robs the poor and deprives the whole world of the resources needed to eradicate poverty, recover from Covid and tackle the climate crisis.”

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