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The Development Channel highlights big debates, promising approaches, and new research and thinkers addressing opportunity and exclusion in the global economy.

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Mossack Fonseca law firm sign is pictured in Panama City, April 4, 2016.
Mossack Fonseca law firm sign is pictured in Panama City, April 4, 2016. Carlos Jasso/Reuters

Corruption Brief Series: How Anonymous Shell Companies Finance Insurgents, Criminals, and Dictators

The latest paper in the Corruption Brief series from the Civil Society, Markets, and Democracy program at the Council on Foreign Relations was published this month. In the brief, Dr. Jodi Vittori, senior policy advisor at Global Witness, addresses the myriad problems posed by anonymous shell companies – corporate entities with few or no employees and no substantive business, which offer a convenient way to privately move money through the international financial system.

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Development
Amid Slowing Trade, What’s Next for Global Supply Chains?
Global trade and the supply chains that support it are undergoing a period of profound change. Supply chains face threats including a resurgence of protectionism, climate change, decaying infrastructure, and human rights abuses. The Development Channel’s series on global supply chains will highlight experts’ analysis on emerging trends and challenges. This post is from Wolfgang Lehmacher, head of supply chains and transport industry at the World Economic Forum (WEF) USA. Global trade volumes have plateaued over the past eighteen months, after decades of expanding twice as fast as gross domestic production (GDP) and driving economic growth. Supply chains were crucial to that trade expansion, as countries increasingly linked into the procurement, manufacturing, and distribution networks that constitute the chains. Amid current stagnation, the question is where trade goes next. Public opinion on trade will matter, as will several major shifts in global supply chains. Diverging Public Support for Trade Europe is turning inward, despite the fact that 90 percent of global demand will come from outside the European Union (EU) in the next decade. In voting to leave the EU, British citizens rejected one of the strongest multi-nation, regional economic blocs. And European countries’ fragmented response to the migrant crisis bodes badly for EU plans for deeper integration and coordinated borders. In the United States, both Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump have taken strong stands against the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), a preferential free trade agreement binding twelve nations and 40 percent of global GDP. In contrast, Asian nations are embracing international trade. For them, the TPP is largely understood as an opportunity. China—not a TPP member—is working to create its own bloc, the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) as an alternative to the U.S.-led pact. RCEP, composed of sixteen countries, would be the world’s largest free-trade area, reducing barriers to trade in goods and services as well as investment. Meanwhile, the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) is guiding the region towards a single market, envisioning the free flows of goods, services, labor, investments, and capital across the ten member states. And bilateral agreements proliferate—for example, earlier this year, Vietnam finalized a free trade agreement with the EU. On the multinational front, World Trade Organization (WTO) members are in the process of ratifying the Trade Facilitation Agreement (FTA) concluded at the 2013 Bali Ministerial Conference. The TFA should make international trade easier, quicker, and less costly by removing red tape at borders, such as measures on the release and clearance of goods, and by enhancing cooperation between border agencies. According to WTO estimates, the TFA could cut worldwide trade costs by between 12.5 percent and 17.5 percent and create around 20 million jobs—the majority in developing countries. Trends in Global Supply Chains    Amid this ongoing debate, the very nature of trade is changing owing to three distinct shifts in global supply chains: the “fast economy” is on the rise, new technologies are proliferating, and e-commerce is expanding. Many sectors now prioritize speed to meet customer demand. Brands have adapted to a market for faster products—for example, Zara can design, manufacture, and get clothes to its stores in just two weeks. This model allows brands to avoid high inventory and costly bets, instead only producing more of what sells best. Since fast products require shorter and more regional supply chains, they involve less intercontinental trade. Technology is making supply chains more dynamic. Information technology, the internet of things, big data, and the cloud enable new management processes that allow for longer and more complex supply chains. The Flex Pulse Centre is one example—it streams data on everything from inventories to quality checks to transportation and delivery statuses, allowing central and local teams to remain updated and prepared to address potential disruptions and risks. This global visibility helps companies to decentralize production and open up new factories and distribution centers across the world, which results in a mix of short, medium, and long distance shipments. Other technological innovations localize and shorten supply chains. 3D printing can move production from factories to shops and homes, and some companies are re-shoring and nearshoring to relocate manufacturing to where technology is most advanced and productivity highest. Both trends reduce cross border trade. Finally, e-commerce and the rise of digital supply chains may boost international trade. Amazon, eBay, and Alibaba, among other e-commerce platforms, enable companies and consumers to buy things globally. They connect millions of manufacturers and billions of consumers, giving even the smallest seller and most distant buyer access to the global market. These connections require logistics and transportation networks that can support the growing number of cross-border transactions as well as regulation suitable to enable transnational e-commerce without jeopardizing sales. The English economist David Ricardo argued that combining international free trade with industry specialization around a country’s comparative strengths would produce widespread benefits. For this, trade’s slowdown is problematic. While in part due to converging capabilities—developing countries catching up with mature economies in terms of education, skills, infrastructure and logistics—the slowdown is more likely a result of digitization and suspicions among Western publics. But we might be unnecessarily worried: between 1980 and 1985 trade growth slowed dramatically, only to revive. Today, global production processes are evolving rapidly, and there is still room for deepening supply chains and trade links. The current slowdown represents more a shift than a permanent change.  
Europe and Eurasia
This Week in Markets and Democracy: New Panama Papers, 1MDB Scandal Developments, Turkey Targets Press
New Panama Papers Expose Africa’s Offshore Dealings The International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) released a second round of Panama Papers. The documents reveal how private firms, business executives, and corrupt officials in fifty-two of Africa’s fifty-four nations hired Panamanian law firm Mossack Fonseca to set up shell companies—many to avoid taxes and hide bribes. Some 1,400 anonymous companies had links to African oil, gas, and mining businesses, facilitating the more than $50 billion in illicit financial outflows from the continent each year. The new releases should give authorities evidence to go after assets at home and abroad—where billions in corruption proceeds are stashed. Ongoing Developments in 1MDB Scandal Last week, the United States, Singapore, and Switzerland went after $1 billion in assets linked to Malaysian state investment fund 1MDB. The U.S. Justice Department’s part represents the largest seizure ever attempted under the Kleptocracy Asset Recovery Initiative. Many of the bank accounts, properties, paintings, and other assets are widely believed to be controlled by Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak and his cronies. Still none face criminal charges at home, and as my colleague Joshua Kurlantzick notes, Najib will likely remain in power. More vulnerable are 1MDB’s banks. U.S. law enforcement officials are investigating anti-money laundering lapses at Goldman Sachs, and Singapore has vowed to take action against four other banks for processing the funds’ transactions. Turkish Government Targets the Press After purging the military, police, courts, and schools, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is going after the media. Turkey is already a tough place to report—Reporters Without Borders ranks it 151 of 180 nations due to internet censorship, press office raids, and harassment of journalists for “insulting the president.” Now, citing links to alleged coup plot leader Fethullah Gülen, Erdogan shut down over 130 media outlets and issued arrest warrants for nearly ninety journalists, as Turkey descends further into authoritarianism.
Americas
This Week in Markets and Democracy: Mexico’s Anticorruption Reforms, South Africa’s Anticorruption Setbacks, Venezuela’s Slow-Motion Coup
Mexico’s New Anticorruption Tools President Enrique Peña Nieto signed into law long-awaited rules to step up Mexico’s fight against corruption. He had to veto an earlier version that would have forced private firms that receive government money to reveal their income and assets. The new measures mandate that all public servants disclose their assets, income, and tax returns. They also set up an independent prosecutor’s office and up the punishments for bribery, embezzlement, and influence peddling. While some civil society groups had hoped for more, the new anticorruption system provides new and stronger tools for those eager to take on bad behavior. South Africa Shows Anticorruption Tools Aren’t Enough While laws against corruption are important, they’re not enough—as South Africa shows. The nation’s anticorruption efforts, enshrined in its 1995 Constitution, have foundered under Jacob Zuma’s government. The National Prosecuting Authority (NPA), created to fight wrongdoing, dropped 783 charges of corruption, fraud, and racketeering against Zuma for his ties to a multi-billion dollar arms deal. In April, Pretoria’s High Court unanimously condemned the dismissals, calling for the charges to be revived. Now the NPA says it will appeal to South Africa’s supreme judicial body to overturn the High Court’s verdict. Though that outcome is unlikely—the Constitutional Court has been democratic South Africa’s strongest anticorruption tool—the process illuminates the limits of laws without political will. Venezuela’s Slow-Motion Coup While Turkey’s failed coup dominates headlines, Venezuela’s military furthered its political control to little international condemnation. Active and retired military officers already governed nearly half of Venezuela’s twenty-three states, one-third of its ministries, and ten state-owned companies in sectors ranging from transportation to agriculture. They set up a new oil and mining company that could absorb state-owned Petróleos de Venezuela S.A. (PDVSA) assets, giving the Ministry of Defense power over the country’s vast natural resources. In the face of a deepening humanitarian crisis, President Nicolás Maduro expanded Defense Minister Vladimir Padrino López’s responsibilities—putting him in charge of all ministries and institutions. The question now is whether Maduro is much more than a figurehead.                                                            
  • China
    The Future of Global Supply Chains: Workshop Report
    Commerce has fundamentally changed over the past thirty years. Intermediate goods—or parts of products traded through global supply chains—now account for 70 percent of all trade. The Civil Society, Markets, and Democracy program hosted a workshop in May to explore the evolution of global supply chains, the risks they face, and how U.S. policies help or hinder the country’s competitiveness. The workshop included current and former government officials, supply chain experts, corporate representatives, and finance specialists. Over the coming months, we will share posts from many of these experts here on the Development Channel, asking them to weigh in on emerging trends, strategies for mitigating supply chain risks, and transparency and sustainability, among other topics. To introduce the series, here are some of the main takeaways from the global supply chains workshop. Read the full rapporteur report here: The Future of Global Supply Chains. Current State of Supply Chains In just a single generation, supply chains have grown to dominate global trade, as products are increasingly made across countries rather than within them. Workshop participants noted that many of the most striking changes come from China’s rise as a major manufacturing hub within these chains, now producing approximately one-quarter of global output. But many factors that enabled China’s growth—such as its labor cost advantage—have eroded, making regions such as Southeast Asia and eastern Europe more appealing by comparison, and threatening China’s place at the center of global supply chains. Worldwide, governments and companies alike are working to make supply chains more transparent. In what participants called a “sea change” in attitudes toward production, China has seen a growing number of voluntary corporate guidelines for supply chain transparency. And in the United States, legal changes—such as a recent amendment of Section 307 of the U.S. Tariff Act of 1930—can help address labor concerns. This spring U.S. customs officials seized a Chinese shipment of soda ash under the new guidelines to keep out products made by forced labor, and participants expect to see many more Section 307 cases, forcing changes in current practices. Supply Chain Risks and Compliance Trends Participants stressed several risks to global supply chains that threaten their resilience and viability, including natural disasters, cyberattacks, climate change (as rising sea levels alter shipping routes), and public health crises such as Zika. In the United States, decrepit infrastructure—ports, railroads, bridges, and airports—hinders competitiveness and the ability to integrate into these globalized means of production. As one participant noted, their company sees much of the United States as “a second-world country.” Protecting workers’ rights remains a major challenge, as chains lengthen and companies use a growing number of small subcontractors to provide components or services, in many cases losing their visibility into working conditions along the supply chain. But workshop participants observed a change in the way that companies and governments are overseeing compliance with labor and environmental standards. They discussed a shift from a traditional compliance model, where companies’ incentives often don’t align with their providers down the chain, to more of a partnership model, where buyers and suppliers embrace a relational (rather than transactional) contract, giving lower-tier suppliers the incentive and security to invest and improve. U.S. Policies to Boost Competitiveness Some participants stressed a fundamental change: trade is no longer the engine of economic growth. This is due to both cyclical changes, such as weaker demand and the commodities bust, and structural changes, including a resurgence of protectionist policies. Many participants focused on new trade agreements such as the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) and Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) as tools to help reverse this trend, and to improve supply chain practices around the world. For instance, the mere desire to qualify for the TPP is helping spur reforms in Asia, despite Chinese officials’ and corporations’ initial skepticism. Still, the TPP and TTIP may not be enough—participants noted the TPP’s limits, including its inattention to the quickly-expanding services sector. And in the face of rising protectionist attitudes, the deals may never materialize. Others pointed to the outdated and fragmented regulatory approach to trade given supply chains’ current realities. With oversight spread across nearly fifty agencies, proliferating standards and regulations can constrain how companies source, manufacture, and move goods around the world. National security concerns can also complicate policy formulation. Participants noted a fundamental tension between creating nimble supply chains that quickly satisfy customer demand, and building more resilient production linkages that can weather unforeseen disruptions.
  • China
    This Week in Markets and Democracy: China’s Private Sector Corruption, Zimbabwe’s Protests, New Corruption Brief
    Chinese Companies lag on Transparency Chinese companies filled the bottom twenty-five spots in a recent Transparency International report ranking one-hundred emerging market multinationals on anticorruption efforts. Three received zeroes (on a zero-to-ten scale) for failing to list subsidiaries, release financials on foreign operations, or set up antibribery programs. The Chinese government is not pressing for change, instead killing a business-led anticorruption task force within the G20 framework. As a result, foreign companies operating in China are hard-pressed to avoid bribery—a challenge reflected in Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) cases. So far this year, over half of all corporate FCPA actions involved bribes paid to Chinese officials, and since 2008, the United States found more cases of misconduct in China than in all other countries combined. Bailing out Zimbabwe Mounting popular frustrations over economic hardship and public corruption led to Zimbabwe’s largest anti-government protests in a decade. As my colleague John Campbell explains, the country’s political and economic situation is deteriorating rapidly—unemployment tops 80 percent, and the government has missed payments to civil servants and pensioners. International donors look willing to lend Zimbabwe $1 billion to pay off its World Bank, African Development Bank, and International Monetary Fund debts, enabling the country to receive new loans. Though that might avoid an economic collapse and humanitarian emergency, it will likely shore up President Robert Mugabe’s ruling Zanu-PF party, whose behavior precipitated the crisis. It is hard to imagine his government pursuing promised economic reforms or refraining from stealing from replenished public coffers—as they have from its lucrative diamond sector. U.S. Efforts to Fight Nigerian Corruption In a new CFR brief, International Affairs Fellow Matthew T. Page argues that the U.S. government should do much more to deter official Nigerian corruption. Elite theft has long undermined the country’s development, security, and governance—areas in which the United States invests significant resources as a longtime ally. Page explains that despite anticorruption rhetoric from high-level U.S. officials—including President Obama and Secretary Kerry—the U.S. approach remains non-confrontational and ineffective. He offers three recommendations for how U.S. policymakers can better support Nigerian efforts, building on President Muhammadu Buhari’s aggressive anti-graft campaign. Page’s piece is the first in CSMD’s new Corruption Brief series that will analyze and propose solutions for a range of corruption issues globally. Watch this space for more.