Until
a few weeks ago, the Panama Canal was the only thing that defined the country
for a lot of people, but today people are likely to know more about it –
unfortunately not so much about it’s beaches or music, but a lot more about
Mossack Fonseca, a law firm based in Panama, and its murky deals. This firm
seems to have drawn a lot of inspiration from the canal as it built another
kind of a canal through which it helped many rich and powerful people hide
money (read tax evasion) and also contributed to and shielded the world of
shadow financing. Here’s a game to show
how easy they made tax evasion appear. There goes a lot of your
not-there-yet soft power Panama!
So,
Panama Papers! Why is this important now? Haven’t we known that these
activities have been happening? Here are some thoughts on why the leak, the
thorough investigation and the timing may well be a game-changer. And here’s more information from the direct source.
All put together, it helps deconstruct the (secret) global phenomena of shell
companies, tax evasion and war financing and to then publicly construct and
prove the links between them.
Proof is Power: Well, yes we have
known about the existence of shadow financing, but we’ve never had so much data
and information about who these people are, who is helping them and how is the
money trail being developed. Knowing something exists and having proof about its existence are two different
things, and without the latter, the former cannot translate into sustainable
impact. It’s significant because not only does it again blow the lid off on the
world of shadow financing and tax evasion, but also because it helps build
strong legal cases to nail culprits.
Another Wake-up Call: It’s also another warning that the current
domestic and global system are not really working well. It’s a reminder to
push for further domestic tax reforms and for greater global collaboration on
exchange of related information. It’s a strong nudge towards signing more
treaties on tax transparency and enforcing them because the existing institutions for information
exchange are caught up in too much of red tape as well. Perhaps, the
bureaucracy is what’s adding to the inefficiency. Also, it’s reminder that
secrecy is far more valued in monetary terms than transparency – that
capitalism tends to side with secrecy until regulated.
Tip of the Iceberg: There’s a graph that’s popular on social media. This is what it looks like.
So
clearly, while this revelation is big, we’d do better not to forget that it’s
just be the tip of the iceberg. Economist
Gabril Zucman estimates that
tax losses due to shadow financing and offshore banking and investments total
up to be about $200 billion per year, that’s almost four times Panama’s
national income. "We may only be scratching the surface then," as
Zucman puts it.
It’s an Industry: Another thing the size of the leak – over 2,600 GB of data
– confirms is that this isn’t about malpractice by a firm, but it’s about the
hidden industry of shadow finance and tax evasion. This is an industry that
now, like many others, is global. Technology has made things easier for it and
law has just not kept up. It’s an industry that draws large capital too and
this makes states also reluctant to take active and immediate steps to block
it. Political will is not that easy to garner when it comes to cutting off a
serious flow of money. That’s one reason why big states like the US too have
not acted as fast on the issue – that’s why Delaware
has more registered companies than residents. It thrives on secrecy and the
more data that goes public about it, the better. That’s how you beat secrecy,
right? Go public with all the information. Of course, validate that information
too as you take on the industry. That’s why this investigation by the International Consortium of Investigative
Journalists in collaboration
with so many other publications around the world has taken over eight months.
Great work ICIJ! A clear sign that there needs to be planned and collaborative
response to the industry.
A Big Link to Peace: There’s been lots of talk about
stopping financing to warring sides, terrorist organisations and rogue militant
outfits. Well, not all of that has succeeded despite some firms linked to transferring
money to major stakeholders in the Syrian conflict for instance being blacklisted. Why?
Well the Panama Papers also describe that money trail. It’s all through shadow
financing that money gets delivered to these banned, dangerous entities. It’s a
big-big link then to peace and to ensuring that you hold power when negotiating
peace treaties. With more data going public, more governments can be
pressurised to act on those companies and more governments can come together to
block these money trails and to dry those treasuries. War is an industry and
this is where some of its exchequer is filled. Again, the Panama Papers may
provide the missing evidences that can help legally tie the financiers, the
middlemen and the final culprits to bring them to justice and to curb organised
war and violence.
The Iron is Hot: This may well be one of the most
important part about the Panama Papers revelation – its timing. About 15-20
years ago, this may not have created enough noise, but this time perhaps,
there’s hope that it can grow into a silent revolution that forces reform.
What’s changed? Well, since the late 2000s we’ve never really in totality
gotten out of the financial crises. From the US sub-prime collapse to the PIGS
economic downturn that’s still on, there’s more economic inequality in the
world today, then there was before. But now, we have the Internet as a medium
to get information out to people and to mobilise over issues.
This
time around, there’s bound to be greater public interest in the revelations
because they care – while many are affected by this economic inequality, others
are losing patience with not insufficient action against tax evaders. In India
there’s the case of Vijay
Mallya who’s fled the country
and is wanted for not paying loans worth billions. Elsewhere, there’s interest
because other big players are involved and black money is a vital issue in all
places, especially with elections in the US this year and poll promises of
fighting corruption in other countries by national leaders like Indian Prime
Minister Narendra Modi and Chinese leader Xi Jinping. They are being pushed to
deliver and the boundaries of the discourse are being widened. This time
around, we could certainly see some real impact because tax evasion has become a
real subject in politics.
That’s
why these revelations matter and why the work done by the consortium and other
journalists is highly commendable. If there’s a whistleblower involved, well
thank you. You’ve all helped deconstruct and publicly construct again
the world of shadow financing. It’s a big nudge towards further reform and
action, and this time around, with greater public interest, this may well
change the balance, bit-by-bit and this Panama Canal may be plugged. But how
the others are exposed and handled is another big challenge.
No comments:
Post a Comment