A
few dirty little secrets coming out
Western
banks 'reaping billions from Colombian cocaine trade'
While
cocaine production ravages countries in Central America, consumers in
the US and Europe are helping developed economies grow rich from the
profits, a study claims
2
June, 2012
The
vast profits made from drug production and trafficking are
overwhelmingly reaped in rich "consuming" countries –
principally across Europe and in the US – rather than war-torn
"producing" nations such as Colombia and Mexico, new
research has revealed. And its authors claim that financial
regulators in the west are reluctant to go after western banks in
pursuit of the massive amount of drug money being laundered through
their systems.
The
most far-reaching and detailed analysis to date of the drug economy
in any country – in this case, Colombia – shows that 2.6% of the
total street value of cocaine produced remains within the country,
while a staggering 97.4% of profits are reaped by criminal
syndicates, and laundered by banks, in first-world consuming
countries.
"The
story of who makes the money from Colombian cocaine is a metaphor for
the disproportionate burden placed in every way on 'producing'
nations like Colombia as a result of the prohibition of drugs,"
said one of the authors of the study, Alejandro Gaviria, launching
its English edition last week.
"Colombian
society has suffered to almost no economic advantage from the drugs
trade, while huge profits are made by criminal distribution networks
in consuming countries, and recycled by banks which operate with
nothing like the restrictions that Colombia's own banking system is
subject to."
His
co-author, Daniel Mejía, added: "The whole system operated by
authorities in the consuming nations is based around going after the
small guy, the weakest link in the chain, and never the big business
or financial systems where the big money is."
The
work, by the two economists at University of the Andes in Bogotá, is
part of an initiative by the Colombian government to overhaul global
drugs policy and focus on money laundering by the big banks in
America and Europe, as well as social prevention of drug taking and
consideration of options for de-criminalising some or all drugs.
The
economists surveyed an entire range of economic, social and political
facets of the drug wars that have ravaged Colombia. The conflict has
now shifted, with deadly consequences, to Mexico and it is feared
will spread imminently to central America. But the most shocking
conclusion relates to what the authors call "the microeconomics
of cocaine production" in their country.
Gaviria
and Mejía estimate that the lowest possible street value (at $100
per gram, about £65) of "net cocaine, after interdiction"
produced in Colombia during the year studied (2008) amounts to
$300bn. But of that only $7.8bn remained in the country.
"It
is a minuscule proportion of GDP," said Mejía, "which can
impact disastrously on society and political life, but not on the
Colombian economy. The economy for Colombian cocaine is outside
Colombia."
Mejía
told the Observer: "The way I try to put it is this: prohibition
is a transfer of the cost of the drug problem from the consuming to
the producing countries."
"If
countries like Colombia benefitted economically from the drug trade,
there would be a certain sense in it all," said Gaviria.
"Instead, we have paid the highest price for someone else's
profits – Colombia until recently, and now Mexico.
"I
put it to Americans like this – suppose all cocaine consumption in
the US disappeared and went to Canada. Would Americans be happy to
see the homicide rates in Seattle skyrocket in order to prevent the
cocaine and the money going to Canada? That way they start to
understand for a moment the cost to Colombia and Mexico."
The
mechanisms
of laundering drug money were highlighted in the Observer last year
after a rare settlement in Miami between US federal authorities and
the Wachovia bank, which admitted to transferring $110m of drug money
into the US, but failing to properly monitor a staggering $376bn
brought into the bank through small exchange houses in Mexico over
four years. (Wachovia has since been taken over by Wells Fargo, which
has co-operated with the investigation.)
But
no one went to jail, and the bank is now in the clear. "Overall,
there's great reluctance to go after the big money," said Mejía.
"They don't target those parts of the chain where there's a
large value added. In Europe and America the money is dispersed –
once it reaches the consuming country it goes into the system, in
every city and state. They'd rather go after the petty economy, the
small people and coca crops in Colombia, even though the economy is
tiny."
Colombia's
banks, meanwhile, said Mejía, "are subject to rigorous control,
to stop laundering of profits that may return to our country. Just to
bank $2,000 involves a huge amount of paperwork – and much of this
is overseen by Americans."
"In
Colombia," said Gaviria, "they ask questions of banks
they'd never ask in the US. If they did, it would be against the laws
of banking privacy. In the US you have very strong laws on bank
secrecy, in Colombia not – though the proportion of laundered money
is the other way round. It's kind of hypocrisy, right?"
Dr
Mejia said: "It's an extension of the way they operate at home.
Go after the lower classes, the weak link in the chain – the little
guy, to show results. Again, transferring the cost of the drug war on
to the poorest, but not the financial system and the big business
that moves all this along."
With
Britain having overtaken the US and Spain as the world's biggest
consumer of cocaine per capita, the Wachovia investigation showed
much of the drug money is also laundered through the City of London,
where the principal Wachovia whistleblower, Martin Woods, was based
in the bank's anti-laundering office. He was wrongfully dismissed
after sounding the alarm.
Gaviria
said: "We know that authorities in the US and UK know far more
than they act upon. The authorities realise things about certain
people they think are moving money for the drug trade – but the DEA
[US Drugs Enforcement Administration] only acts on a fraction of what
it knows."
"It's
taboo to go after the big banks," added Mejía. "It's
political suicide in this economic climate, because the amounts of
money recycled are so high."
Anti-Drugs
Policies In Colombia: Successes, Failures And Wrong Turns, edited by
Alejandro Gaviria and Daniel Mejía, Ediciones Uniandes, 2011
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