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Africa losing US$89billion a year in illicit financial flows: UN

lUNCTAD Secretary-General Mukhisa Kituyi

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GENEVA — Africa is losing nearly US$89 billion a year in illicit financial flows such as tax evasion and theft, amounting to more than it receives in development aid, a United Nations study has showed.
The estimate, in the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development’s (UNCTAD) 248-page report, is its most comprehensive to date for Africa.

It shows an increasing trend over time and is higher than most previous estimates.
The report released on Monday calls Africa a “net creditor to the world”, echoing economists’ observations that the aid-reliant continent is actually a net exporter of capital because of these trends.
“Illicit financial flows rob Africa and its people of their prospects, undermining transparency and accountability and eroding trust in African institutions,” said UNCTAD Secretary-General Mukhisa Kituyi.
Junior Davis, head of policy and research at UNCTAD’s Africa division, said the figure was likely an underestimate, citing data limitations.
Zimbabwe, for example, has lost billions of diamond money through mining deals in which government ministers, officials and Chinese companies were involved.

The late President Robert Mugabe put the figure at US$15 billion. Experts, however, say that was a gross underestimate.
Nearly half of the total annual figure of US$88,6 billion is accounted for by the export of commodities such as gold, diamonds and platinum, the report said.

For example, gold accounted for 77 percent of the total under-invoiced exports worth US$40 billion in 2015, it showed.
Understating a commodity’s true value helps conceal trade profits abroad and deprives developing countries of foreign exchange and erodes their tax base, UNCTAD said.
Tackling illicit flows is a priority for the UN, whose General Assembly adopted a resolution on this in 2018, and the report urges African countries to draw on the report to present “renewed arguments” in international forums.
Continent-wide problem results in over US$1 trillion siphoned off since 1980.

— Al Jazeera

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