Description |
1 online resource (138 pages) : color illustrations, text file, PDF |
Contents |
Preface -- Key findings -- Executive summary -- Introduction -- Estimating the global proceeds of crime -- Detailed analysis of a transnational organized crime sector -- Socio-economic impact of financial flows emerging from drug trafficking and other transnational organized crime -- Existing international legal instruments to tackle the problem -- Summary and conclusions -- Annex: Text of relevant sections of international legal instruments |
Summary |
The purpose of this study was to examine the magnitude of illicit funds generated by drug trafficking and organized crime, and the extent to which they are laundered. Research in this area is still limited and results difficult to compare, but likely orders of magnitude may be estimated, though they should be treated with caution. The most widely quoted figure for the extent of money laundered has been the IMF 'consensus range' of 2% to 5% of global GDP. The best estimate for the amount available for laundering through the financial system, emerging from a meta-analysis of existing estimates, would be equivalent to 2.7% of global GDP. Expressed as a proportion of national GDP, all crime proceeds appear to be generally higher in developing countries and tend to be laundered abroad more frequently. The results also suggest that the 'interception rate' for anti-money-laundering efforts at the global level remains low. Globally, it appears that much less than 1% (probably around 0.2%) of the proceeds of crime laundered via the financial system are seized and frozen. The presented outcome still relies on a large number of assumptions (number of traffickers, market structure, factors influencing the decisions of moneylaunderers) whose validity needs to be tested, opening a whole set of new research questions for the future. Analysis of the socio-economic impact suggests that the most severe consequence of criminal funds is the further perpetuation and promotion of criminal activities. In the drug area, research indicates that the socio-economic costs related to drug abuse are twice as high as the income generated by organized crime; in some countries (USA, UK) one can even find a 3:1 ratio. Criminal funds, even if invested in the legal economy, may create a number of problems, from distortions of the resource allocation, to 'crowding out' licit sectors and undermining the reputation of local institutions, which, in turn, can hamper investment and economic growth. The situation is less clear-cut for financial centres receiving illicit funds, but the long-term consequences may be negative if they do not actively fight money-laundering |
Notes |
"October 2011." |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references |
Notes |
Online resource; title from PDF title page (viewed Apr. 9, 2012) |
Subject |
Transnational crime -- Statistics
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Organized crime.
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Smuggling
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Money laundering -- Statistics
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Drug traffic -- Statistics
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TRUE CRIME -- General.
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Drug traffic
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Money laundering
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Organized crime
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Smuggling
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Transnational crime
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Genre/Form |
Statistics
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Form |
Electronic book
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Author |
Walker, John, author
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United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, issuing body.
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ISBN |
9789210551670 |
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9210551672 |
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