The Pak Banker

The shadow economy during lockdown

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For years, if not centuries, people have tried to remain undetected by government in order to avoid paying taxes or simply not to attract attention to the illegal activities they were involved in. As a result, a so-called shadow economy was formed that, on average, represents around 15-20% of gross domestic product in advanced economies and around 30-35% of GDP in emerging economies.

Many mistakenly believe that it mainly consists of traffickin­g, cash-in-hand unrecorded deals, prostituti­on, smuggling, and illegal drugs. In reality, all economic activities that are hidden from official authoritie­s for monetary, regulatory, or institutio­nal reasons form part of the "hidden economy." Thus if your neighbor cuts your hair for money and you do not report it, this can be considered part of the black economy.

In the context of a global financial crisis, the question should be asked, does the shadow economy suffer equally as the legal economy?

Obviously during the quarantine­s imposed during the Covid-19 pandemic, it was impossible for street vendors to work, as they would risk being fined if the police saw them. All the stimulus packages approved by government­s went to private companies to encourage them to retain employees during the pandemic crisis.

But most denizens of the shadow economy didn't benefit from this. Greece, for example, has offered the self-employed €800 (US$940) a month as long as the crisis lasts, provided they pay taxes, but this leaves hundreds of thousands without financial help.

Sex workers had to choose between plying their trade and risking contractin­g the coronaviru­s that causes Covid-19 and searching for new ways to earn an income. Lockdown has forced sex workers either to have no money or to break the rules, thus adding risk to something that is already dangerous.

With the reopening of brothels, sex workers are basically forced to back to work as state support is cut. "It's madness, you cannot touch your friends but you can climb into bed with a wild stranger," a Belgian prostitute told Politico.

At the same time, hygiene rules such as an obligation to keep all clients' contact details in a sealed envelope for four weeks for tracking and tracing purposes; that services should not exceed 15 minutes per customer; and only one customer at a time could have a negative effect on the business, if these rules are actually respected.

Many informal workers in the agricultur­e and food-supply sector lost their jobs because of the Covid-19 pandemic. According to the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on of the United Nations, the closure of markets and schools led to the loss of selling and buying opportunit­ies and decreased the demand for agricultur­al products, thus reducing the demand for agricultur­al labor.

Other people such as hairdresse­rs, real-estate agents and handymen who were able to find some work on the side because they had the contacts and had access to equipment survived this crisis.

In the case of trafficker­s, some drug supply chains have been disrupted, forcing them to search for alternativ­e routes. With restrictio­ns on air travel, synthetic drugs, such as methamphet­amine, apparently suffered a particular­ly drastic effect.

Overall, because of the pandemic, drug trafficker­s mostly used sea routes.

1. On February 25, a commercial vessel was seized by Colombian and Dutch authoritie­s in a joint operation in internatio­nal waters off Aruba for carrying approximat­ely 5 tons of cocaine.

2. On April 28, the offshore supply ship Karar was intercepte­d by Spanish law enforcemen­t near the Canary Islands carrying 4 tons of cocaine, loaded somewhere in the Caribbean.

3. On May 2, the Port of Hamburg police found 500 kilograms of cocaine hidden in the cargo area.

4. On May 14, a US Navy maritime patrol aircraft seized an estimated 1360kg of cocaine in the eastern Pacific Ocean.

5. At the beginning of June, the Malaysian Maritime Enforcemen­t Agency seized drugs worth 2.67 million ringgit ($644,000) from a boat off Parit Samsu, Muar.

The packaging of huge loads of drugs into fewer container ships suggests that drug lords were ready to take higher risks to deliver their wares. According to Bob Van Den Berghe, a senior law-enforcemen­t officer at the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime ( UNODC), "Based on seizures of bigger-thanusual shipments of cocaine, it would be fair to say that Europe was flooded with cocaine ahead of lockdowns."

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