Ghana - dirty money conduit, via Barclays?
In September 2007 we raised a red flag about the conduct of Barclays Bank, which appeared to be working to help Ghana, an imminent oil producer, become a tax haven. Now we have this, from a Ghanaian news organisation:
"Ghana has been urged to strengthen institutions and master the political will ensure that the country does not become a safe haven for money laundering activities , as its offshore banking ambitions ‘ risk being soft touch magnet for flood of dirty money’."
The warning comes from a London-based attorney, John Hardy. His comments are right, as far as they go, but what he should have said was that turning itself into a secrecy jurisdiction is a recipe for further undermining the economies of African countries (we'd be particularly worried about oil-rich Nigeria.)
As with oil, the provision of financial secrecy for outsiders provides a source of easy rents that create no links of accountability between rulers and citizens - and thus this plan, if it comes to fruition, is likely to prove to be a curse on large numbers of ordinary Ghanaians too.
As Jeffrey Owens of the OECD rightly said in January:
"The last thing Africa needs is a tax haven in the centre of the African continent."
Well said, Mr. Owens.
"Ghana has been urged to strengthen institutions and master the political will ensure that the country does not become a safe haven for money laundering activities , as its offshore banking ambitions ‘ risk being soft touch magnet for flood of dirty money’."
The warning comes from a London-based attorney, John Hardy. His comments are right, as far as they go, but what he should have said was that turning itself into a secrecy jurisdiction is a recipe for further undermining the economies of African countries (we'd be particularly worried about oil-rich Nigeria.)
As with oil, the provision of financial secrecy for outsiders provides a source of easy rents that create no links of accountability between rulers and citizens - and thus this plan, if it comes to fruition, is likely to prove to be a curse on large numbers of ordinary Ghanaians too.
As Jeffrey Owens of the OECD rightly said in January:
"The last thing Africa needs is a tax haven in the centre of the African continent."
Well said, Mr. Owens.
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