Showing posts with label Corruption. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Corruption. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

This is another illustration of the fact that technical regulatory fixes will not suffice

From The Kaufmann Governance Post:

"From Madoff to Stanford Ponzi, from SEC to Congress: in dire need of political reforms

By Kaufmann | February 18, 2009

Another Ponzi scheme has allegedly been uncovered now, led by the Texas Financier R. A. Stanford, who may have swindled about 50,000 investors out of US $8 billion, or so. The Feds have raided his house of cards but were having a hard time finding him.

At US $50 billion, Madoff may have stood out because of the sheer magnitude of his scam. But obviously he is not alone in large Ponzi schemes, not even within the US. As global financial conditions have continued to deteriorate, the nakedness of those emperors without clothes is starkly exposed.

Sir R. Allen Stanford gets out of his helicopter (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)

Sir R. Allen Stanford gets out of his helicopter (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)

But like the case of Madoff, this case also raises questions about whether ‘the SEC was asleep at the switch in this case as well. Evidently allegations of fraud (and possible drug money laundering) have been made against Stanford over the past decade. Yet the SEC took belated action very recently only after two former employees filed a lawsuit in civil court.

And again, like Madoff and other instances of ‘capture,’ this case raises questions about the links between financiers and Washington politicians. Did money in politics play a role in this case as well? It is alleged that Stanford and his companies (based in the Caribbean island of Antigua…) spent over US $7 million on campaign contributions and lobbying efforts to loosen regulation of offshore banks. In Congress, the main political recipients of such largesse cut across party lines, and at least one of them may have taken a paid trip to Antigua to be entertained by Stanford.

Sheila Krumholz of the Center for Responsive Politics argues that the investigation of Stanford should include his links with members of Congress: “Surely there has to be a part of the investigation to look at what was done in Congress and whether the money that was spent to lobby and make political contributions played any role in all of this”.

This is another illustration of the fact that technical regulatory fixes will not suffice, because it begs the role of ‘money in politics’ and of ‘legal corruption.’ A serious reform agenda ought to transcend narrow technical aspects and also encompass political dimensions, particularly regarding political finance, lobbying, conflict of interest and capture."

Me:

  1. Don the libertarian Democrat Says: Your comment is awaiting moderation.
    February 18th, 2009 at 5:06 pm

    I’m predicting a Ponzi Bubble. It seems that you can run one of these schemes for years without anyone being able to figure out if it’s a Ponzi Scheme or genius investing. All you need to worry about is how to evade eventual capture. In the meantime, you can live the High Life.

    Let me ask you: Has anyone ever been caught right after starting a Ponzi Scheme?

Thursday, January 1, 2009

"But it is a price worth paying for boosting its political independence."

A good post on the FT:

"
Gas war flares up

Published: December 17 2008 19:56 | Last updated: December 17 2008 19:56

For the fourth year running, Russia and Ukraine are deadlocked in their annual gas contract talks, generating fears that supplies in the region and in the European Union might be interrupted over the new year.

Gazprom, the Russian state-controlled gas group, has toured EU capitals to explain why, if the gas goes off on January 1, it will all be Ukraine’s fault. The company wants to pre-empt charges that it is all a dastardly Kremlin campaign to hit Kiev’s pro-west administration.

Gazprom protests too much. The gas trade is so opaque that it is difficult to say where the dividing lines lie between politics, commerce and the personal interests of those running the business in central Asia, Russia and Ukraine( TRUE ). But it is clear that in this high-stakes game, Russia holds the top cards( THEY HAVE THE GAS. ). So it is fair to assume that if Russia really wanted to take politics out of the trade it would do so( TRUE ).

That said, Ukraine could do much more to stabilise its end of the business. Instead of constantly casting itself as a victim of Russian bullying, it should bolster its bargaining position. First, it should pay its gas debts on time so that arrears do not, as they always do, become a weapon in Gazprom’s hands( TRUE ). Next, it must finish the half-complete reform of the domestic market so that gas flows transparently to consumers in one direction and cash flows back, in accountable ways, in the other( YES ). Finally, Kiev, in co-operation with Moscow, must fulfil pledges to cut intermediaries out of the wholesale trade and strike a direct deal with Gazprom( A GOOD IDEA ).

None of this will be easy given the confusion in Ukraine’s domestic politics, rampant corruption in the gas trade( YES ) and the severe pressure that the world economic crisis is putting on Kiev. But once it is done, Ukraine will be in a far better position to resist Russian pressure( GOOD ).

Whatever happens, Ukraine will probably end up paying more for its gas as Russia targets the reasonable goal( YES ) of raising prices and ending Communist-era subsidies. Gazprom has already done this in other ex-Communist countries, including the Baltic states, which have equally difficult political ties with Moscow. It has no reason to make an exception of Ukraine( YES ).

For Kiev a bigger gas bill will be a burden in the looming recession. But it is a price worth paying for boosting its political independence( YES )."