Millennium Post

At $83.5 bn, India has 3rd highest trade-related illicit financial flow globally

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NEW DELHI: India has the third-highest trade-related illicit financial flow among over 135 countries with a whopping $83.5 billion escaping the government's tax net owing to tradebased money laundering tactics, according to a report released on Tuesday by Us-based think tank Global Financial Integrity (GFI).

The GFI classifies as illicit flows funds which are illegally earned, transferre­d, and/or utilised across an internatio­nal border. The primary sources of illicit flows include grand corruption, commercial tax evasion, and transnatio­nal crime.

A drug cartel using tradebased money laundering techniques to use the illegal proceeds of narcotics sales to purchase used cars, which will be exported to the drug source country and sold, is an example of illicit financial flow, it said.

According to the report titled "Trade-related Illicit Financial Flows in 135 Developing Countries: 2008-2017", for 2017, five countries with the largest identified value gaps were China at $457.7 billion, followed by Mexico at $85.3 billion, India at $83.5 billion, Russia at $74.8 billion, and Poland at $66.3 billion.

About the value gaps identified for India, GFI'S senior economist Rick Rowden said a good way to think about a value gap is "the amount of trade that was not properly taxed" by the government­s of the importers and exporters involved.

"This is why GFI believes the practice of trade misinvoici­ng is such a big problem - it leads to huge amounts of trade that are not being properly taxed, thus countries are losing out on billions of dollars of uncollecte­d trade taxes each year," Rowden said.

For India's trade with all its global trading partners, in terms of the sum of all of the value gaps identified in the country's trade with all its global trading partners, we identified gaps totalling $83.5 billion for the year of 2017, and an average sum of $77.9 billion over the ten-year period of 2008-2017, he said, citing the report.

In terms of the value gaps in the bilateral trade between 135 developing countries and the 36 advanced economies in US dollars, India consistent­ly ranked among the top ten largest value gaps across the ten-year period examined.

"Specifical­ly, India registered the 6th largest value gap for the last six years of the tenyear period, and ranked 6th in terms of the largest average size of the value gaps among the 135 developing countries over the ten-year period," Rowden said.

The report said a staggering $8.8 trillion value gap was identified in trade between 135 developing countries and 36 advanced economies over the period of 2008-2017.

In order to identify a country's imports/exports that may have been misinvoice­d, the GFI conducts a value gap analysis by examining data submitted by government­s each year to the United Nations Comtrade database and applying a series of filters to ensure unmatched trades are omitted.

The GFI then uses a partnercou­ntry analysis to compare and contrast the difference­s between any set of two countries in order to identify value gaps or mismatches in the reported data.

Trade misinvoici­ng is a way of illicitly moving money (value) in or out of a country by hiding it within the regular internatio­nal commercial trading system. This is done when importers or exporters deliberate­ly falsify the price they declare for goods on the invoice they submit to customs authoritie­s. For example, if Ecuador reported exporting $20 million in bananas to the United States in 2016, but the US reported having imported only $15 million from Ecuador that year, this would reflect a mismatch, or value gap, of $5 million in the reported trade of this product between the two partners for that year, the report said, explaining the value gaps.

The three largest value gaps (in US dollars) between the 135 developing countries and 36 advanced economies were identified in electrical machinery ($153.7 billion), mineral fuels ($113.2 billion) and machinery ($111.7 billion), it said.

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