We feel for the two billions human beings who are reduced to a life of extreme poverty with absolutely no hope of improvement. What if we were the main purveyors of their misery, the organisers of the silent holocaust of the third world?
A generation and a half ago, some of our compatriots actively helped set up the worst genocide in
Today, corruption has been exposed in a compelling way as a root cause of world instability and poverty, but we tend to look the other way. In
Last year, former judge Eva Joly, who had successfully led the Elf case, in which members of the French nomenklatura were for the first time convicted of embezzlement, published a best-seller in which she names top managers condemned in the Elf case who still quietly enjoy their stolen money, their convictions suspended and apparently forgotten. She also questions the role of French companies in
This year, Jean Merckaert and Antoine Dulin, who work with CCFD, a Catholic charitable trust against hunger, published a damning report on “ill-acquired money: the fortune of dictators and western leniency”, listing the belongings bought with dirty money and their owners. Capitalising on their research, a group of charities denounced the role of tax havens: “They make it hard to locate stolen assets, because of banking secrecy and of dummy corporation, trust, foundations, etc. which shield the real owner. They encourage the laundering of stolen money. They allow the quick transfer of funds to places in which justice has no access… However, tax havens only exist with the agreement of big international financial markets. Half of worldwide offshore territories belong to the Commonwealth; the State of Delaware in the United States can be defined as a tax and legal haven; Europe gives shelter to Luxembourg, Switzerland and Lichtenstein, and France tolerates two of the worst offshore centres in the world, Monaco and Andorra.”
We start to feel the rub even more when Raymond Baker identifies the promoters of this underground economy. They turn out to be large companies from G8 countries. In particular, big banks are so engrossed in their ferocious competition that they are ready to deliver any service needed to erase the origins of any kind of funds, as long as they lay their hands on these assets. Both in Europe and in the
So, which percentage of our national income do we accept to derive from drug trafficking, prostitution, human trafficking, racketeering, exploitation of human misery, money transfer from the poorer to the richer? Are we ready to sell off our principles, to trade our souls against more riches? If no, corruption and corrupt practices must be fought; that includes specific actions: setting limits to banking secrecy, to judicial impunity, to laws allowing the handling of money earned through crimes committed abroad. Multinationals need to be compelled to publish their tax records for every country where they operate. Governments, international institutions, the World Bank, universities and business schools need to join forces and take action.
It may be far reaching. The facts gathered in the fight against corruption show that the dominant philosophy in business still counts only two principles: that everything can be reduced to econometrics, and that everything that serves the economic growth of the company is good, regardless of legal or human consequences. This cynical capitalism is at heart incompatible with human rights and human dignity, core values of our democratic societies’ laws and – whenever applicable - religious beliefs. It is the same type of double standards that brought about Nazism and the extermination camps.
The question is whether we want to act, this time.
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