For years, Western governments and financial institutions have been gladly profiting from the schemes that allow Russian oligarchs and others to stash their ill-gotten gains abroad. Their complicity has removed the incentives these elites might have had to rein in their countries' authoritarian leaders.
Russia’s war in Ukraine may not be going as it had planned, but the worst is still to come. And while Western financial sanctions
against Russian institutions and oligarchs have exceeded what some were
expecting, they have not targeted the Western-based roots of Russian
President Vladimir Putin’s regime.
As in many other kleptocratic regimes, Putin’s power is based on a
deal
between an autocrat and oligarchs. The autocrat rules the country
however he wants and enriches his allies, who make huge fortunes from
the country’s natural resources or through
regime-sanctioned monopolies.
But there is a catch: As the oligarchs’ coffers grow, they become more
concerned about the autocrat’s power to seize their assets or harm their
families. They are left with two options. The first is to develop
formal and de facto institutions to
constrain the autocrat, perhaps even paving the way for much-needed
structural reform.
The second option is to move their assets and their families abroad, so
that they can avoid the fate of Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the leading
Russian oligarch whom Putin
expropriated and imprisoned in the early 2000s.
Many Russian oligarchs have availed themselves of the second option,
which requires two essential forms of Western assistance. First, the
Western banking system needs to provide easy opportunities for them to
launder
their wealth. London, Switzerland, Luxembourg, Cyprus, Jersey, the
Bahamas, and many smaller jurisdictions such as the Cayman Islands have
been meeting this demand for years. European banks also have been
enthusiastic participants in the process, and the US financial system has provided all of them with the
critical infrastructure.
Second, Western financial capitals need to welcome the oligarchs’
families, allowing them to buy property (often via trusts and shell
companies) and enroll their children in premier educational
institutions. Cities like
London and
New York have welcomed oligarchs and their kin to the heart of high society.
It is reasonable to assume that Putin’s ability to establish a
personalist autocracy would have been substantially curtailed if Russian
elites had not had these golden trap doors to the West. But this is not
just a Russian story. The superrich in many other countries – including
the Gulf petrostates, China, India, Turkey, some Latin American
countries, and Ukraine in earlier times – have also secured their
illicit gains with the
complicity of Western financial institutions and governments.
These arrangements
have not only helped to sustain autocratic regimes in Russia and
elsewhere. They have also engulfed Western financial institutions and
economies. Oligarchs’ money has transformed financial markets by
injecting huge amounts of liquidity, thereby changing the nature of
financial intermediation and contributing to growing global imbalances.
Since 1990, the United States, the United Kingdom, and several other
Western countries have run large current-account deficits financed by capital flows from the rest of the world.
After three decades of this, the amount of dark money circulating in
the international financial system has reached gargantuan proportions.
Gabriel Zucman of the University of California, Berkeley
estimates
that at least 8% of global financial wealth (more than $7.5 trillion)
is now held in tax havens – a figure that does not include the other
forms of dark money residing at the heart of the Western financial
system. Not surprisingly, autocratic regimes account for a
disproportionately large share of these dark-money activities. Zucman
finds that some 52% of all household wealth in Russia – and even greater
shares in the Gulf states – is held offshore. These illicit flows
have exacerbated social and political problems around the world. The
demand for luxury housing has fueled disruptive real-estate booms in
hotspots like London, New York, and Vancouver. Because prime real estate
in these cities was already predominantly owned by the wealthy, the
resulting housing-price inflation has exacerbated inequality. Illicit
financial flows probably have contributed to the remarkable boom in
Western stock markets in recent years as well, further benefiting the
rich. But the most pernicious effects can be found within Western
financial and fiscal institutions. The West’s accommodation of dark
money has accelerated the trend toward more opaque ownership structures
and complex trusts aimed at evading taxes, supported by a massive
infrastructure of bankers, accountants, and lawyers around the world.
When Zucman and his colleagues analyzed data from random audits to
determine the scale of tax evasion in the US, they
concluded
that the richest 1% of American households hide more than 20% of their
income using the tools provided by this nefarious industry. Similarly, through the
Panama Papers and then the
Pandora Papers,
the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists has
demonstrated that offshore tax evasion is much more systemic and
widespread than was commonly believed. Thousands of businesspeople,
politicians, and celebrities from around the world have been implicated
in what amounts to a global money-laundering operation. These schemes
have left a stain on Western democracies and financial institutions.
While the world’s kleptocrats have amassed vast, illegitimate fortunes –
and while Western elites have gotten in on the action – Western
governments have been unable to generate tax revenues from the rich. As a
result, welfare-state institutions and services have been cut back, and
existing inequalities have deepened. Shocked by Putin’s unprovoked war, Western politicians have rushed to support severe trade sanctions,
kicking most
(but not all) Russian banks out of the
SWIFT financial messaging system
and freezing the bulk of the Russian central bank’s foreign-exchange
holdings. But it will take more courage to clamp down on tax evasion and
dark money now that they have become integral features of the current
financial system. Still, if there was ever a moment to change course,
this is it. Western policymakers can rein in a tax-evasion scheme that
has been unfairly benefiting the world’s most powerful corporations and
tycoons for years. In doing so, they can also raise sorely needed tax
revenues to support new infrastructure and social programs at home. If
the West wants to see itself on the right side of history, targeting
Russia is not enough. It must clean out its own Augean stables.
Project Syndicate
© Project Syndicate
Key
Hover over the blue highlighted
text to view the acronym meaning
Hover
over these icons for more information
Comments:
No Comments for this Article