The U.S. Must End Its Complicity in Illicit Financial Flows Out of Africa

Every year, nearly $90 billion of African resources are lost to the Global North in Illicit Financial Flows, or IFFs.

If you caught the breaking news story about Russians flying gold out of Sudan, straight from the mines, you were likely shocked by the blatant theft. According to the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, every year, nearly $90 billion of African resources are lost to the Global North in Illicit Financial Flows, or IFFs. It isn’t just the Russians — U.S.-based corporations and others throughout the Global North are also complicit in this theft.

But at this point, as far as we can tell, curbing these flows is not on the Biden administration’s agenda for the U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit, which will take place December 13-15, 2022. This seems to be at odds with President Biden’s commitment to “reinforce the U.S.-Africa commitment to democracy and human rights,” “advance peace and security,” “respond to the climate crisis,” and “amplify diaspora ties.”

IFF activity always involves trampling on human rights.

According to the Zimbabwe Environmental Law Association, the extractive industry is fertile ground for IFFs. Human rights violations manifest as a lack of fair and adequate compensation during involuntary relocations, a lack of access to remedy for rights violations, harassment, threats, and prosecution of environmental human rights defenders.

People in these plundered communities face harm to local biodiversity, loss of livelihood, and a lack of meaningful benefits. The U.S. can do much to mitigate the damage, and we can start with meaningful preparation for the upcoming summit.

First on the agenda should be our stance regarding the new demand for lithium, cobalt, and other strategic minerals needed to fuel electric cars. We can get ahead of IFF activity in this industry, including amplifying community voices that call for transparent contracting, substantive investment in communities, decent wages and working conditions for miners, and annual tax revenue reporting.

Currently, there are no consequences for the U.S.-based companies involved in IFF activities. In other words, they profit from corruption with impunity.

A recent case involves Bain & Company and then-President Jacob Zuma of South Africa. They colluded to decimate the country’s ability to collect tax revenue, redirected funds to Mr. Zuma and his friends, and crafted a procurement process to benefit the U.S.-based firm. Bain later admitted that they hadn’t had the expertise for the project and returned millions in fees, which didn’t even begin to address the harm done to everyday South Africans. Those involved in-country are being taken to task, the South African effort to get to the bottom of the scheme well in hand.

It is time for us to do our part.

The financial mechanisms that facilitate IFFs are complex. They typically originate from commercial tax avoidance and evasion, trade mis-invoicing, abusive transfer pricing, and criminal activities — including the drug trade, human trafficking, illegal arms, smuggling, bribery, and theft by government officials.

The impact? Commodities are undervalued at the extraction site, then declared at full market rate on import. Illegal gold exports from Sudan to South Africa end up in Middle Eastern gold markets and Russia. Ill-gotten gains sit in tax havens around the world. The losses are breathtaking and heartbreaking, as they represent revenue that should be invested in sustainable development in Africa.

We can do better.

The Bain example reflects an absurd foreign assistance cycle. IFFs drain community revenues, which the U.S. government then tries to plug with assistance. A more sustainable model would be a partnership with Africa via policies to regulate the IFF-related activity of U.S.-based corporations, transnational agreements that honor human rights, and support for global rules designed to stop IFFs from impoverishing entire communities.

The Biden/Harris administration can start in December at the U.S.-Africa Leaders Summit.

Imani Countess is an Open Society Foundations Economic Inequality Fellow and Director of the US-Africa Bridge Building Project.

The Time for Collective Action is Now!

Worldwide, governments and international institutions understand that IFFs are a threat, but many, including the US, lack the political will to act. Africa’s leaders and peoples call for the end to IFFs and the unconditional repatriation of stolen assets. Please join them in their efforts to end IFFs!

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Learn more aspects of illicit financial flows:

The US-Africa Bridge Building Project links economic inequality activists and social movements to strengthen collective efforts for tax justice at all levels of the global economy. Ending IFFs is a critical element in that fight. Please see these Fact Sheets below and visit this page periodically for key updates.

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