Letters & Opinion

IMF – World Bank Talks a Rare Opportunity

Image of Ronald Sanders

THE October meetings this year of the World Bank (WB) and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) in Washington DC present a rare opportunity for Caribbean government representatives to be heard by crucial decision-makers.

Ironically, what provides this opportunity is a matter most Caribbean governments would wish did not exist. It is the withdrawal by US and European banks of correspondent banking relations (CBR’s) from Caribbean financial institutions.

The withdrawal of CBR’s has already badly affected several Caribbean countries. Many Caribbean banks have lost their traditional CBR’s with US banks such as Bank of America, Wells Fargo and Citibank, and also with British banks like Barclays and Royal Bank of Scotland. The loss of these CBRs has come at a high price, including (i) newly imposed minimum activity thresholds below which the account is closed, (ii) higher costs (often associated with due diligence) passed on to the consumer when establishing a new CBR, and (iii) pressure on the respondent banks to limit their exposure to certain categories of customers in order to maintain a CBR.

Some Caribbean banks have had to go further afield to find banks that would settle their transactions. Consequently, costs have risen, and ultimately they will be passed– on to every customer. The cost of doing business is set to rise.

The problem will get greater. For instance, the IMF has stated that loss of CBR’s “could disrupt financial services, including trade finance and remittances, and lead to financial exclusion for certain categories of customers, particularly Money or Value Transfer Services and Non-Profit Organizations, which serve vulnerable segments of the population”. In fact, money transfer operations in some Caribbean countries have already been forced to close down. This has had an effect on remittances from the Caribbean diaspora in the US particularly to their dependents in the region.

If the transfer of remittances is severely affected, the social welfare cushion that it provides to the vulnerable in the Caribbean societies will be eroded, putting great pressure on the resources of governments that are already cash-strapped and debt-ridden. This will be very difficult for all governments, and impossible for some.

Beyond remittances, if Caribbean countries – governments and the private sector – cannot do international business through CBRs, the countries will be cut-off from the global trading system. This is not imminent but it is by no means impossible unless action is taken at the international level to remedy the very difficult problem that the loss of CBRs presents.

The reason that the global banks in the US and Britain are withdrawing CBRs from the Caribbean and other small countries in the Pacific and Africa, is manifold. But, at its centre are the several requirements of organisations such as the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development’s Global Forum on Transparency and Exchange of Information for Tax Purposes (the Global Forum), including the ‘black list’ of countries that they have produced in the past. Beyond these two powerful organisations, other countries, such as the US, and regions like the European Union, have created their own lists. The combination of these measures, supposedly directed at anti-money laundering and terrorism financing activities, weighs heavily on the decision of Banks in the US and about whether or not to provide CBRs.

The fact that Caribbean countries have been branded as ‘tax havens’ and the region has been dubbed ‘high risk’ for financial services, effectively spoiled their chances of keeping CBRs that they enjoyed for years. The global banks in the US and Europe simply do not want to take the risk of having to pay heavy financial and other penalties for the slightest incident that allows money laundering or tax evasion, however remote it may be. And, it does not seem to matter that the majority of Caribbean jurisdictions are compliant with FATF and OECD rules or that they have signed agreements to automatically provide tax information to the US and more than 12 EU countries.

So, why do the IMF and WB meetings in October provide an opportunity? The first reason is that both the IMF and the WB are now engaged on this issue. Both institutions recognise the immediate and possible long term damage to Caribbean countries if remedial action is not taken swiftly. They have both established small states machinery and are ready to work for, and with, Caribbean governments to address the problem. Significantly, the Managing Director of the IMF, Christine Lagarde has spoken on the issue personally.

In July, at a meeting of the US Federal Reserve, she said: “I am concerned that all is not well in this world of small countries with small financial systems. In fact, there is a risk that they become more marginalized. All actors have a part to play: countries need to upgrade their regulatory frameworks, regulators in key financial centres need to clarify regulatory expectations and ensure consistent application over time; and global banks need to avoid knee jerk reactions and find sensible ways to reduce their costs. There is a lot at stake. For both the big and the small. For all of us”.

That is an important intervention, and one which Caribbean representatives can seize as they engage in a high-level dialogue with Ms Lagarde herself and with senior officials of the WB. The engagement is not a guarantee of change, but it is a chance to begin the process of formulating solutions to a problem whose gravity should not be underestimated.

It is not a problem that will be contained in the Caribbean. If economic circumstances become dire, waves of migrants and refugees will wash-up on the shores of the US, Canada and Europe; so too will the narcotics whose trade will benefit from increased poverty and unemployment. Even money laundering would increase as, inevitably, the cross-border flow of money and other means go underground – far away from the reach of regulations, controls and law-enforcement.

Response and previous commentaries: www.sironaldsanders.com

(The writer is Antigua and Barbuda’s Ambassador to the United States and the OAS. He is also Senior Fellow at the Institute of Commonwealth Studies, University of London and Massey College in the University of Toronto. The views expressed are his own.)

4 Comments

  1. Behold $
    A wedding scenario
    Best man is dressed in Emerald green formal tail coat and trousers
    Gold shirt and jigger boots
    His smirk is that of a hammer head shark midway on its torpedo swim to an opportunistic frenzied attack
    He is confident in his luck and Blarney Stone heritage
    The groom is the IMF
    The bride is A virgin named St Lucia
    The officiating pastor is wearing the entire wardrobe and accesories of a monarch being coronated at WestMinster Abbey but his horns and forked tail are quite apparent
    The classical wedding march is replaced by a full orchestral rendition rendition of God Save the Queen
    By the Local police band

  2. Dassault,

    Your imagery is much too obtuse, deliberately so, because your comment’s objective is pretty much the same as the US’ water-carrier in the Caribbean and the OAS, Ronald Sanders!

    Cutting to the chase, here’s a snippet of commentary from an open thread at this site, http://www.moonofalabama.org/2016/10/open-thread-2016-32.html, which just crossed my desk:

    http://www.moonofalabama.org/2016/10/open-thread-2016-32.html

    “Michael Hudson reviews a book by James Galbraith, Welcome to the Poisoned Chalice

    “The euro’s creation can best be viewed as a legalistic coup d’état to replace national parliaments with a coterie of financial managers acting on behalf of creditors, drawn largely from the ranks of investment bankers. Tax policy, regulatory and pension policies are assigned to these unelected central planners. Empowered to override sovereign self-determination and national referendums on economic and social policy, their policy prescription is to impose austerity and force privatization selloffs that are basically foreclosures on indebted economies. Galbraith rightly calls this financial colonialism.

    The asset grab promoted by the IMF and ECB is incompatible with reviving Greece or other southern European economies (not to speak of the Baltics and Ukraine). The theory is unchanged from that imposed on Germany after World War I – the theories of Jacques Rueff, Bertil Ohlin and the Austrians, controverted by Keynes, Harold Moulton and others at the time. [1] Their victorious role in this debate has been expurgated from today’s public discourse and even from academia. What passes for economic orthodoxy today is an unreformed (and incorrigible) austerity economics of the 1920s, pretending that an economy’s debts can all be paid simply by lowering wage levels, taxing consumers more, making workers (and ultimately, businesses and government) poorer, and selling off the public domain (mainly to foreigners from the creditor nations).

    At first glance the repeated “failure” of austerity prescriptions to “help economies recover” seems to be insanity – defined as doing the same thing again and again, hoping that the result may be different. But what if the financial planners are not insane? What if they simply seek professional success by rationalizing politics favored by the vested interests that employ them, headed by the IMF, central bankers and the policy think tanks and business schools they sponsor? The effects of pro-creditor policies have become so constant over so many decades that it now must be seen as deliberate, not a mistake that can be fixed by pointing out a more realistic body of economics (which already was available in the 1920s).

    Any sovereign nation has the right to avoid being impoverished by creditors who have lent sums far in excess of the amount that can be paid without being forced to engage in privatization selloffs at distress prices. Such demands are akin to military attack, having a similar objective: seizure of the indebted economy’s land, natural resources and public infrastructure, and control over its government.

    These demands are at odds with parliamentary democracy and national self-determination. Yet they are written into the way the eurozone is constructed. That is why withdrawal from the current financial regime is a precondition for recovery of economic sovereignty. It must start with control over the money supply and the tax system, followed by control over public infrastructure and the pricing of its services.

    The gauntlet has been thrown down, posing a question today much like that of the 1930s: Will the alternative to austerity, debt deflation and the resulting economic breakdown be resolved by a pro-labor socialist alternative, or will it lead to a victory by anti-European right-wing parties?

    [1] My book Trade, Development and Foreign Debt (2002) reviews the German reparations debate over “capital transfers” with regard to how austerity actually reduces the ability to pay.”

    This EU-disease is essentially the same that is attempting to spread via the US’ TTP, TTIP, and TISA. The recognition of finance as the de jure supra-governmental power, and the en-serfment of us all.

    There really is a very acute need for all of us, the world over, to assert our sovereign power, precedent to government, certainly to finance, and to reclaim a spot for ourselves, for humanity, indeed for all life on earth, in the sun.

    Posted by: jfl | Oct 3, 2016 7:55:37 AM | 76″

  3. I see that my post revealing the truth about Sander’s being a water-carrier for the US and its economic hitman, the IMF, has been censored here; so that the St. Lucian public will remain subservient to the neo-colonials!

    The moderators and editors of the Voice are in lockstep with the corporate press around the world in ensuring that their propaganda is the only thing that citizens will get to read – and even pay for the poison that kills them.

    Here’s an article that tells how it is done:

    Special Interests Create The “Good”, The “Bad” And The “Compelling” Story – The Media Tell It
    http://www.moonofalabama.org/2016/10/special-interests-create-the-good-and-bad-and-the-compelling-story-the-media-just-tell-it.html

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