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Introduction
One of the top priorities of the international community during the
last years, post-September 2001, has been to win the war against
terrorism, and it is for this purpose that various international
organisations and bodies have developed a comprehensive
anti-terrorism strategy consisting of multiple components. One such
component is the global effort to stop terrorist financing, which is
intended to identify, disrupt and dismantle the financial networks of
terrorist organisations. In this respect, what remains obvious is
that at present terrorist financing has still been taking advantage
of: (1) weaknesses in national regulatory schemes; (2) the informal
transfer and movements of assets across national boundaries; (3) the
disparity of corporate laws from one national system to another,
which opens the possibility of using corporate vehicles in different
States to conceal both the source and the beneficial final owner; and
(4) several unregulated professional categories. For all these
reasons it is of the utmost importance to look at where the failures
lie in the strategy of Combating the Financing of Terrorism (CFT).
This paper’s aim is to emphasise the challenges faced by
international cooperation in combating the financing of terrorism. It
reviews the existing weaknesses and failures of each group of
stakeholders participating in the CFT strategy: (1) the lack of
coordination between international organisations and the huge burden
of legislations created; (2) the limitations of the institutional
framework that hamper the implementation of international standards
at a national level; and (3) the high ongoing costs of implementing
the risk approach for private non-state actors (financial and
non-financial institutions). Finally, the paper concludes by pointing
out which challenges must be confronted and which actions should be
taken for enhancing international cooperation.
Weaknesses at the International Level: Lack of Coordination
Between International Organisations and the huge burden of legislations created
This first section reviews the role in the fight against the
financing of terrorism of the main international organisations and
institutions involved in the CFT strategy: the United Nations, the
Financial Action Task Force, the transgovernmental Financial
Regulatory Organisations and the Egmond Group of Financial Intelligence Units.
The United Nations
Terrorism is regarded by the United Nations (UN) as a pervasive and
pernicious threat to global security and order, for which reason it
has become one of the key international entities in addressing a wide
variety of complex problems of a global character such as terrorism.
The UN has the broadest range of membership as well as the ability to
adopt treaties or international conventions that have the effect of
law in a country once they are signed and ratified, depending on the
country’s constitution. The UN was the first international
organisation to undertake significant action to fight money
laundering (ML) on a ‘truly world-wide basis’, and operates the Global Programme against Money Laundering (GPML).
Since the mid-1980s the need for a modern anti-money-laundering
strategy has become widely accepted internationally. Progress in this
area has actually become a critical tool in fighting organised crime,
corruption and the financing of terrorism and in maintaining the
integrity of the financial markets. The contribution of the UN to the
harmonisation of actions taken against ML and FT is explored below.
The first UN action was the 1988 United Nations Convention against
Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (the
Vienna Convention). This Convention was the first appeal to countries to deal with provisions to fight the illicit drug trade and with related law enforcement issues. The Convention is limited to drug trafficking as a predicate offence and does not address preventive aspects. Although it does not use the phrase ML, it does define the concept, which has become the most widely accepted one. The Convention came into force on 11 November 1990.
In line with the role of the Vienna Convention, Savona (1997) and Koh
(2006) state: ‘The Ratification of the Vienna Convention is
becoming virtually an indicator of responsible membership in the
anti-drug and anti-Money Laundering world community’ (Savona,
1997, p. 68). ‘In the international arena, the 1988 Vienna
Convention for the first time established Money Laundering as “an
independent criminal offence” although it confined its
application only to drug-related proceeds’ (Koh, 2006, p. 43).
Before the Convention dealing with organised crime, in awareness of
the global problem posed by terrorism, the UN’s 1999
International Convention for the Suppression of the Financing of
Terrorism was adopted on the assumption that ‘the financing of terrorism is a matter of grave concern to the international community and that
the number and seriousness of acts of international terrorism depend
on the financing that terrorists may obtain’ (Radicati &
Megliani, 2004, p. 378). The Convention requires ratifying countries
to criminalise terrorism, terrorist organisations, and terrorist
acts. Under the Convention, it is unlawful for any person to provide
or collect funds with the intent that these funds be used, or the
knowledge that the funds will be used, for terrorist activities. The
Convention encourages States to implement measures that are consistent with the FATF and came into force in 2002.
The Convention enhanced the cooperation between States in adopting effective measures while not being able to agree on a specific definition of
FT. It called State parties to adopt domestic measures for the
purposes of identifying, detecting, freezing or seizing funds used
for (defined) terrorist offences, and to ensure that financial
institutions within their territories adopted efficient measures for
the identification of clients and suspicious transactions. It
recommended States to prohibit the opening of accounts by
unidentified holders and to ask for the licensing of all money transmission agencies.
One year later, the UN, in its strategy to undermine and
disrupt organised crime groups by focusing on their finances, adopted
another universal instrument, namely the 2000 International
Convention Against Transnational Organized Crime (the Palermo
Convention). The approach of this convention is well illustrated in Articles 7 (1)(a) and 7 (3):
Article 7(1a) shall institute a comprehensive domestic regulatory and supervisory Regime from banks
and non-bank financial institutions and, where appropriate, other
bodies particularly susceptible to money-laundering, within its
competence, in order to deter and detect all forms of
money-laundering, which Regime shall emphasize the requirements for customer identification, record-keeping and the reporting of suspicious transactions.
Article 7 (3) then calls upon participating countries ‘to use a guideline’ as remarked again by Gilmore; the referred guideline is FATF standards.
The Palermo Convention came into force in September 2003, compelling
ratifying countries to criminalise ML via domestic law and to
consider all serious crimes as ML predicate offences, whether
committed within or without the country, as well as to permit the
required criminal knowledge or intent to be inferred from objective
facts.Two
further criteria for application amount to the most important
contribution of the UN Convention against Transnational Organised
Crime. First, the offence may be committed by ‘an organised
criminal group’ and secondly, the offence may be ‘transnational in nature’.
Furthermore, the Palermo Convention establishes regulatory regimes to
deter and detect all forms of ML, including customer identification,
recordkeeping and reporting of suspicious transactions; authorises
the cooperation and exchange of information among administrative,
regulatory, law enforcement and other authorities, both domestically
and internationally; considers the establishment of a financial unit
to collect, analyse and disseminate information; and promote
international cooperation.
In keeping with international events, the Security Council adopted
two resolutions on 15 October 1999 and 16 January 2002, respectively:
SC Resolutions 1267 and 1390. These resolutions compel member States
to freeze assets of individuals and entities associated with Osama
Bin Ladin or members of al-Qaeda or the Taliban that are included in
the consolidated list maintained and regularly updated by the UN 1267 Sanctions Committee.
Subsequently, a SC Resolution passed in response to a threat to
International Peace and Security under Chapter VII of the UN. SC Resolution 1373 was adopted on 28 September 2001 in direct response to the events of 11 September 2001. It compels countries to criminalise actions
financing terrorism and to deny all forms of support for it; freeze
funds or assets of persons, organisations or entities involved in
terrorist acts; prohibit active or passive assistance to terrorists;
and cooperate with other countries in criminal investigations and sharing information about planned terrorist acts.
Aware of the difficulties countries encounter when implementing such
various legal instruments in their legislations, the UN created the
Global Program Against Money Laundering (GPML). GPML is a research
and assistance project offering technical expertise, training and
advice to member countries on AML/CFT upon request in order to raise
awareness. It helps to create legal frameworks with the support of
model legislation; develop institutional capacity in particular with
the creation of financial intelligence units; provide training for
policymakers, judicial authorities, law enforcement bodies, regulator
agencies and private financial sectors, including computer-base
training; promote a regional approach to addressing problems;
maintain strategic relationships and databases; and perform analyses
of relevant information.
Also, the need to harmonise national legislations, more specifically
in the case of CFT, drove the UN to create the United Nations Model
Terrorist Financing Hill, 2003. This model law has been
developed by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) for
use in countries whose fundamental legal systems are substantially
based on the common law tradition. Like any model, it will need to be adjusted to
ensure both domestic legal validity (eg, in terms of constitutional
principles and other basic concepts of its legal system) and domestic
operational effectiveness (eg, in terms of implementing arrangements and infrastructure).
With the aim of monitoring the implementation of the resolutions and
the harmonisation of international instruments within national
legislations, the UN created the Counter Terrorism Committee (CTC).
In a number of subsequent resolutions, the Security Council referred
to best practices, codes and standards as tools that can assist
States in their implementation of the resolution. In its Resolution
1377 (2001), the Council invited the Committee ‘to explore ways
in which States can be assisted, and in particular to explore with
international, regional and sub regional organisations… the
promotion of best-practice in the areas covered by resolution 1373
(2001), including the preparation of model laws as appropriate…’.
In its resolution 1456 (2003), paragraph 4 (iii), the Council
requested the Committee, in monitoring the implementation of the
resolution, ‘to bear in mind all international best practices,
codes and standards which are relevant to the implementation of
resolution 1373 (2001)’ and in its resolution 1566 (2004),
paragraph 7, the Council requested the Committee ‘in
consultation with relevant international, regional and sub regional
organisations and the United Nations bodies to develop a set of best
practices to assist States in implementing the provisions of
resolution 1373 (2001) related to the financing of terrorism’.
As a result of multilateral action taken under UNSCRs 1267 and 1373,
more than 170 countries have implemented blocking orders to freeze
the assets of terrorists. According to the Department of Treasury,
US$147 million in assets of terrorist organisations have been blocked
or frozen world-wide since 11 September 2001 (Eckert, 2008).
After the CTC’s revitalisation in 2004, an Executive
Directorate was created. The key functions of the Counter Terrorism
Executive Directorate (CTED) are: to provide in-depth analysis of the
implementation of resolution 1373 (2001) by States; to engage States
in a dialogue through letters, direct conversations and visits on a
flexible and tailored basis; and to act as a facilitator or broker of
technical assistance to countries where vulnerabilities in their
counter-terrorism responses have been identified. It can link this
country, or a donor country or international agency that has the
relevant expertise to help it overcome the problem and to keep in
touch with international, regional and sub-regional organisations.
At this point, it is appropriate to outline how the actions taken by
countries to meet international standards and reporting have created
a huge burden, particularly for those low-income countries without the capacity and resources.
Murthy (2007) highlights the ‘Lack of interest among poor
countries (some of whom believe that terrorism is a problem of the
Western Countries) is due to the absence of incentives in return for
their cooperation. (…) there is a huge deficit in the desired
level of cooperation and coordination between regional/sub-regional organizations and the CTC’ (Murthy, 2007, p. 8)
Ward (2003) points out that post-11 September, ‘the council
sets out certain mandatory measures to prevent and suppress
international terrorism, including reporting to the CTC on actions
taken to implement the resolution 1373 (2001), no State met all the
requirements, and it created a tremendous burden, particularly for
those of a lesser degree of capacity and resources’ (Ward,
2003, p. 289). Here, it is likewise relevant to state the lack of
resources and coordination between bodies and organisations in keeping with the works of several scholars.
Luck (2005) remarked that some operational areas including the
Security Council as well as the CTD ‘remain understaffed and
under-funded’, and that ‘the proliferation of
international of international counter-terrorism efforts raises
worrisome questions about coordination and coherence, even as it
should quell claims that this is a simple choice between
unilateralism and multilateralism, between going it alone and working with others’ (Luck, 2005, p. 25).
Similarly to Koh (2006), the researcher considers that the
question of sanctions deserves great attention as a strategy to make
the AML/CFT campaign effective. When a country, upon assessment, is
found to be non-compliant with the AML/framework, the international
community might impose sanctions on that country. The CTC has not
applied its chapter VII powers to impose sanctions on States which
are not compliant with the requirements of Resolution 1373. At
present, CTC only reports a list of States that have been late in submitting state reports in accordance with Resolution 1373.
Regarding the impact of corruption on ML and FT issues, two more
Conventions have been taken into account for the scope of this
research. In response to the threat posed by corruption, the UN passed the 2003 United Nations Convention against Corruption.
This is the first legally-binding multilateral treaty to address the
problems relating to corruption. On a global basis it requires
parties to institute a comprehensive domestic regulatory and
supervisory Regime for banks and financial institutions to deter and
detect ML. The Regime must emphasise requirements for customer
identification, record-keeping and suspicious transaction reporting.
In accordance with article 68 (1) of the aforementioned resolution,
the United Nations Convention against Corruption came into force on
14 December 2005. The Convention is also concerned with the links
between corruption and forms of crime, in particular organised crime
and ML. In the timeframe of this working paper, few parties have ratified this important Convention.
So far, we have revised the effectiveness of the efforts made by the
UN to achieve the ratification and implementation of UN Conventions.
In this working paper we state that there is a lack of resources in
the countries concerned to pass legislation as well as a lack of
coordination between bodies and organisations. The UN Conventions
have created a huge burden, particularly for those low-income countries without the capacity and resources.
The Financial Action Task Force and Mutual Evaluation
Continuing the review of the institutions’ contribution to
AML/CFT effectiveness, the second step is to evaluate The Financial
Action Task Force (FATF). The role of this body relies upon what are
technically ‘non-binding standards’ supported by a soft
enforcement mechanism. The roots of counter-FT lie in the anti-Money
Laundering initiatives adopted globally, regionally and nationally
during the 1990s. The FATF is an intergovernmental organisation
established in 1989 by the G7 countries, working as a policy-making group prepared for suggesting legislative and regulatory action to counter ML. The Forty Recommendations of the FATF constitute the international standard for effective AML/CFT measures.
The FATF regularly sees to it that its members check their compliance
with these Forty Recommendations (as well as the Nine Special
Recommendations on Terrorist Financing) and suggests areas for
improvement through periodic mutual evaluations. The FATF identifies
emerging trends and methods used to launder money and it suggests
measures to combat them. An extensive analysis of the funding methods
of terrorist groups and of the financial resources supporting
terrorist activities has been carried out by the FATF.
The Forty Recommendations, issued in 1990 and updated in 1996, constitute a legal framework involving patterns of ML. These recommendations include requirements
for States to criminalise ML activities, to adopt customer
identification and record-keeping practices and to commit themselves
to cooperating with other States and IOs in AML activities. This case
of ‘soft law’ responds to the logic of informal
commitments, which States can spontaneously comply with. In this
case, the efforts undertaken by the FAFT constitute the general and main reference for international and domestic legislation.
The 2001 FAFT review identified a problem: ML is actively
investigated and prosecuted in a limited number of countries, while
elsewhere the offence is not frequently prosecuted. The UN General
Assembly Resolution 51/210 of 17 December 1996 recognised the
specific nature of FT, not only where it is linked to drug dealing,
arms trafficking and other criminal methods, but also to legal and
non-criminal institutions.
At an extraordinary plenary meeting on the FT held in Washington
(2001), the FAFT decided to expand the function of the FAFT beyond ML. Eight Special Recommendations were appended to the existing Forty Recommendations.
Thus, the list of potential legal sources of finance was expanded to
include the collection of membership dues and/or subscriptions, sales
of publications, speaking tours, cultural and social events, and
examples of legitimate businesses supporting terrorism, including publishing, food production, building construction and computers.
The UN and FATF Recommendations set the root and direction for
national efforts aimed at reducing the vulnerability of domestic
financial systems to terrorist manipulation. AML legislation was
finally especially extended to deal with FT. There should be little
difficulty in expanding the scope of domestic and international AML
measures and other measures and legislation to cover the funding and
ML activities of terrorist networks. But the key factors lie in
‘legitimate sources’, state financial sponsorship,
donations and contributions from supporters, which complicates the puzzle.
The lack of regulation of the financial system –offering
attractive opportunities for terrorists to achieve their criminal
goals, enabling a profitable management of financial resources as
well as their transfer through informal banking channels– adds
complexity to the situation. For this reason, the CFT strategy turns
out to be more than a matter of combating an ordinary financial crime
because of the involvement in the FT of legitimate entities and
legitimate financial resources, trade, humanitarian aid, etc, which
use small amounts of money and the banking networks to elude the existing monitoring and controlling schemes.
In the conclusion to the 1990 FATF report, it was admitted that ‘a
regular assessment of progress realized in enforcing Money Laundering
measures would stimulate countries to give these issues a high
priority’ (Levi, 2002b, p. 96). FATF II decided to supplement a
process of self-assessment with a system of mutual evaluation,
examined by selected other members of the FATF, according to an
agreed protocol for examination and agreed selection criteria. Since
the initial round of mutual evaluation, its major purpose has been to
assess the degree of formal compliance with the Recommendations.
Levi and Gilmore have underlined the international significance of
the FATF precedent of the rise of mutual evaluation processes:
‘That to submit to
periodic on- site inspection by one’s peers, constituted a
radical departure from the orthodoxy of international affairs, where
considerations of autonomy and sensitivities about territorial
sovereignty have traditionally dominated governmental thinking’
(Levi, 2002b, p. 108).
They believed the FATF Recommendations are a form of ‘soft law’
and these Recommendations do not formally entail a matter of
international law. Some Recommendations may have been implemented
into customary international law but many are regarded as lacking in any mandatory legal effect.
In line with the idea of the use of mutual evaluation reports to
evaluate the compliance with the FATF Recommendations by
countries/jurisdictions, Savona (1997) points out that one of the
most delicate problems of the AML regulation and its control is that
the enactment of legislation and issuance of regulations are obvious
important steps, but their implementation is more important and more
difficult to assess objectively. Official data on implementation,
such as that provided though the mutual evaluation reports of the FATF, are essential for him. He also referred in his work to
the difficulties in analysing cross-laundering data from different
countries because every country will display peculiarities in
criminal behaviours, policies, implementation, recording and reporting, which makes any kind of meaningful aggregation difficult.
On the premise that the mutual evaluation report is the best tool for
evaluating the implementation of FATF Recommendations by countries,
we will extrapolate the results of 46 jurisdictions’ mutual
evaluations in order to determine the global level of compliance. This captures the fact that countries/jurisdictions may well comply
with some Recommendation while not complying with others.
To date, response policies towards non-compliance have been active to
the extent of threatening to suspend FATF membership of some
countries until the Recommendations have been implemented. The issue
of non-compliance policy merits greater examination by this
researcher in the sense of ‘establishing the minimum
compliance’ that should be achieved among FATF members because
at present the Recommendations allow a considerable discretion in their application.
With regard to response policies toward non-member countries, the
FATF applies the same measures as with member countries. Nonetheless,
the FATF can recommend broader countermeasures. With the aim of evaluating non-FATF members, the Non-Cooperative
Countries and Territories (NCCTs) exercise began in 1998 when the
majority of the countries did not have AML measures in place. The
intent of this initiative is to secure the adoption by all financial
centres of international standards to prevent, detect and punish ML,
and to reach effective international cooperation in the global fight against ML/FT.
‘In February 2000, the FATF published the initial report on NCCTs, which
included 25 criteria identifying detrimental rules and practices that
impede international co-operation in the fight against Money
Laundering. The exercise reviewed 47 jurisdictions in two rounds of
reviews (31 in 2000) and (16 in 2001). A total of 23 jurisdictions
were identified as NCCTs (15 in 2000 and 8 in 2001). No additional jurisdictions have been reviewed under this process since 2001’ (FATF-GAFI, 2006).
In the last year, the FATF agreed to the removal of Nauru and Nigeria from the NCCT list. The FATF is also
ending a formal monitoring of countries de-listed prior to June 2005. The future monitoring of these countries will be conducted
within the context of the relevant FSRBs and their evaluation
mechanisms. Some of the countries within the sample have been
pressured because of their being unregulated jurisdictions and have
been included in the NCCT list in 2000-01, which includes countries
such as Panama and Hungary. In this dissertation, we shall pay
special attention to the evolution of the AML/CFT implementation in
these countries. As of writing, only Myanmar is still considered by the FATF to be an NCCT.
In the light of the results of NCCT evaluation, non-compliance response policies should be implemented in accordance with FATF, consisting of measures such as: actions to put an end to the
detrimental rules and practices; counter-measures designed to protect
economies against money of unlawful origin; specific requirements for
financial institutions in FATF members to pay special attention to,
or report on, financial transactions conducted with individuals or
legal entities having their account at financial institutions
established in a ‘non-cooperative jurisdiction’; and
conditioning, restricting, targeting or even prohibiting financial
transactions with non-cooperative jurisdictions. There have been, to
my mind, two failures of the NCCT exercise. First, the NCCT criteria
application does not contain references to combating the financing of
terrorism requirements, ‘if NCCT criteria included these [CFT]
elements in the future, a link could be secured to the binding
resolutions of the Security Council (…). Security Council
Resolution 1373 imposes binding obligations on all States to suppress
the financing of terrorism and in this sense, there could be further
justification for the NCCT initiative under the authority of Security Council’ (Koh, 2006, p. 166).
Secondly, the FATF members have imposed a harmonisation of its
standards to non-FATF members. When applying its Recommendations for AML/CFT compliance, it has been rare for the FATF to inform the
CTC of this fact. The present researcher agrees with Koh that this
lack of initiative to list a ‘non-compliant state twice’
by FATF and CTC has decreased the effectiveness of AML/CFT strategy world-wide.
Transgovernmental Financial Regulatory Organisations
Prior to closing the section that evaluates the role of IOs and
bodies in the consecution of AML/CFT effectiveness, we must also take
into account the transgovernmental regulatory organisations, which
have played a leading role in the AML/CFT strategy. Recent work on
transnational politics suggests that international organizations as
transnational governmental networks (Slaughter, 2004) and epistemic
communities (Haas, 1992) may have a strong impact on areas previously thought to lie within the domain of domestic governance.
For this reason, we will pay attention to issues that constrain the
transgovernmental regulatory organisation for protecting the
integrity of the financial system. We shall review such regulatory
organisations as the Basel Committee, IAIS and IOSCO. It should be
noted at this point that the regulation relies on its members to implement its Recommendations within their respective countries.
Reports on overall compliance with integrity standards found that
regulators had a lack of authority to investigate, limited access to
time-sensitive data needed for surveillance purposes, insufficient
resources for inspection, surveillance and investigation, and often a
limited enforcement mandate. The reports also underline that there is
a clear need for more efficient methods to disseminate information to
the public and to improve the quality of the information being released.
Reports conclude that weaknesses in the implementation of many of the
BCP, IAIS and IOSCO principles were evident across a range of
jurisdictions, although the most marked concerns where those related
to assessments of developing and emerging markets. The implementation
of these rules applicable to financial systems greatly differs among
countries within the same region. For this reason, one should point
out the necessity to supplement and emphasise effective regional
‘surveillance’ mechanisms for the improvement of all integrity standards.
The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (Basel Committee) was
formed in 1974 by the central bank governors of the Group of 10
Countries. It has issued three documents covering ML issues:
-
Statement on Prevention of Criminal Use of the Banking System for
the Purpose of Money Laundering. It contains 4 principles that
should be used by banking institutions: (a) proper customer
identification; (b) high ethical standards and compliance with laws
and regulations; (c) cooperation with law enforcement authorities; and (d) policies and procedures to be used to adhere to.
-
The 25 core principles for effective banking supervision,
stipulating that bank supervision must determine that they have
adequate policies and procedures in place, including strict
know-your-customer (KYC) rules. Core principle 15 is linked to AML policies put in place.
-
A paper called ‘customer due diligence for banks’: this paper provides extensive guidance on an appropriate CDD policy.
Recent assessments of compliance with these regulatory standards found that 45% of the evaluated countries (36) have inadequate or no legal framework to comply with the Core Principle 15. The report states the following:
‘Preconditions for effective banking supervision are generally in place in advanced
economies. In developing countries, a number of shortcomings in the
underpinning infrastructure were observed: transparency is rather
low, at times due to opaque financial statements and problems in
accounting and auditing. However, many emerging markets that have
recently experienced the transition to market economies face
substantial challenges in making their accounting systems consistent
with international practices, and the need to test and properly
implement recent changes in their legal system’ (IMF, 2004, p. 13).
The use of insurance for the scope of ML has been discussed in
previous chapters of this dissertation. The international Association
of Insurance Supervisors (IAIS), established in 1994, represents the
insurance supervisory authorities from 130 jurisdictions. The role of
the IAIS is to promote cooperation among insurance regulators; to set
international standards for insurance supervision; to provide
training to members; and to coordinate work with regulators in the
other financial sectors and international financial institutions.
In January 2002, the association issued the Guidance Paper No.5,
Anti-Money Laundering Guidance Notes for Insurance Supervisors. This
AML Guidance note should be implemented by jurisdictions taking into
account the particular kind of insurance business offered within and the characteristics of its financial and legal system.
Recent assessments of the IAIS core principles on insurance
supervision on 42 countries concluded: ‘that there is unclear
jurisdiction of the insurance supervisory bodies over corporate
governance issues, and the system depends on general corporate laws
and regulations’. The report also shows that the ‘absence
and deficiencies in the exchange of information with other supervisors’ (IMF, 2004, p. 31).
The International Organization of Securities Commissioners (IOSCO)
passed a ‘Resolution on Money Laundering’ in 1992. The
resolution provides that each IOSCO member should consider customer
identifying information record-keeping requirements; ensure
monitoring and compliance procedures designed to deter and detect ML
and have appropriate powers to share information in order to combat ML.
Recent assessments of the IOSCO principles implementation show that
most assessors found that regulators had a lack of authority to
investigate, had limited access to time-sensitive data needed for
surveillance purposes, insufficient resources for inspection,
surveillance and investigation, and often a limited enforcement
mandate. With respect to issuers, there is a clear need for more
efficient methods to disseminate information to the public and to
improve the quality of the information being released. There is also
a need to address the lack of harmonisation between international and domestic accounting and auditing standards.
The Egmond Group of Financial Intelligence Units
We may close this section with the review of the Egmond Group’s
contribution to AML/CFT effectiveness. A few Financial Intelligence
Units (FIUs) were created in 1990 in response to the lack of a central agency to receive, analyse and report the heterogeneous information needed to
combat terrorism. In 2003 the FATF included explicit Recommendations
on the establishment and functioning of FIUs. Over the last years the
IMF and WB have recognised the importance of an FIU in the AML/CFT
strategy and they have provided technical assistance to countries in the establishment and strengthening of FIUs.
The existence of an FIU is justified due to the criminal behaviour of
money launderers and terrorists, which is compared by contributors in
a World Bank report to a ‘stream of water, following gravity
and constantly prodding the banks for weak points through which it
can spread further’. And this behaviour is the main challenge currently faced by FIUs:
‘FIUs currently face more specific challenges. The most important ones are the integration of
the financing of terrorism in their work, the broadening of the
suspicious transaction reporting obligation beyond the regulated
financial sector, and the quest for improved international cooperation’ (>WB, 2004, p. 92).
Traditional FIUs have been used to deal with ML, but the strategy to
fight against terrorism is different and it will force FIUs to
integrate new functions (above all the rest) in those countries that have never faced terrorism.
The extension of the reporting in the case of the designated
non-financial businesses and professions (DNFBPs): casinos (which
also includes internet casinos), real estate agents, dealers in
precious metals, dealers in precious stones, the accounting and legal
profession have had and will continue to have a wide implication for
FIUs. My prediction on this matter is that the FIUs will have to
devote specialised resources to supervise the new types of reports
coming from DNFBPs. Against this background, it seems clear that the
existence of an effective national FIU unit may help the effectiveness of the AML/CFT.
State Actors: Institutional Factors Limiting the Implementation of
AML/CFT International Standards
As was our goal when measuring the compliance of 46 countries with the AML/CFT (see Annex I), we have gained an understanding of the weaknesses and failures of the
implementation of the AML/CFT standards which are presented as
follows. In accordance with the results of jurisdictions’
compliance with the AML/CFT recommendations displayed in the annex,
we shall now highlight the most important weaknesses of AML/CFT
compliance, which not only correspond to the limitations of the
countries/jurisdictions when it comes to developing domestic regimes,
but also to the fact that the governments of these countries have not
found support for their policies to tackle ML/FT from the regime participants.
It is here that we may usefully explain the underlying weaknesses in
worldwide compliance. These weaknesses may be categorised into four:
(1) failure to ratify and implement international conventions on ML
and FT in some countries; (2) inadequate customer identification
policies in countries within all income groups; (3) countries fail to
provide resources to supervise AML programmes and institutions; and
(4) countries fail to enhance mutual legal assistance, information
sharing and cooperation with national sectors and those across borders.
Failure to Ratify and Implement International Conventions on ML and FT in Some Countries
The international legislative Regime against terrorism is
characterised by diversity and fragmentation in the way it shows the
ratifications of the international Convention on Terrorism. Despite
the existing anti-terrorist Conventions before 2001, they are not
universal. Technical standards developed for fighting against ML and
FT have not been adopted by a great number of States. International
anti-terrorism laws only exist on paper in many countries. The most
important weakness for the AML/CFT lies in the inability of the
international community to find a definition of terrorism, something
that has constrained the system, and this situation permits the existence of havens for terrorist networks.
Furthermore, when analysing the mutual evaluation assessments, one
realises that the names of terrorist groups are different depending
on who has compiled them: the UN, the EU, the US or the UK. There are
no international agreements as to what constitutes terrorism and FT
(eg, the IRA is a terrorist group for the UK, but not for the US; Hezbollah is a terrorist group for the US but not for the EU).
In some countries, the list of predicate offences does not respect
the 40 Recommendations. There is only a limited number of predicate
crimes for ML and it means that incrimination of ML is not fully
consistent with the Vienna and Palermo Conventions. When ML is
prevalent in a country, it generates more crime and corruption, and
the effects of countries’ attractiveness for ML purposes have been broadly discussed by Unger (2006).
There is also an inadequate, weak and selective enforcement of
AML/CFT provisions. The confiscation Regime is not clear and
effective enough. Ineffective penalties, including difficult
confiscation provisions are some of the reasons why the freeze
strategy has not been more successful. The lack of ML prosecutions
within the sample indicates that the Regime is not being effectively
implemented. In the majority of countries, no sanction Regime exists
for ML offences committed by natural persons acting as a front or on behalf of a trustee.
In addition, the lack of harmonisation of corporate law worldwide can
create a ‘domino effect’ on other laws and regulations,
such as the criminal, administrative and banking laws. The greatest
obstacles to international cooperation for the prevention of ML are
still found in the area of ‘identification of the real
beneficial owner’. The main obstacle is a lack of
regulation requiring full information regarding the real beneficial
owner of a public or private limited company, especially when a legal
entity is a shareholder or director, or the issuance of bearer shares is permitted.
Inadequate Customer Identification Policies in Countries within All Income Groups
The low level of overall compliance in this area is due to the fact
that the costumer due diligence approach to fighting ML and FT is not
a simple task and can contradict the culture of banking which is that
of gaining clients. The compliance officer or risk manager in charge
of ‘customer due diligence( CDD)’ tends to be in conflict
with the incentives provided to customer service units dedicated to
personal, private or offshore banking. In addition, national
corporate law can affect the opacity/transparency of the financial
system. Predominantly, the preventive measures have only been taken in formal economies.
In relation to these results, it is convenient to revise a couple of
issues related to preventive measures. In some countries, it has not
been clearly shown that bank secrecy has been fully lifted by the AML
national law. This research points out that some countries and
jurisdictions put the financial system at risk while maintaining their secrecy laws.
For example, in relation to Recommendation 5 Customer due diligence
(CDD), 86% of the countries are not totally compliant with the core
goal of the AML/CFT Regime, that is, to undertake customer due
diligence measures, including identifying and verifying the identity
of their customers when establishing business relations, carrying out
occasional transactions, and when there is a suspicion of ML or FT
and the financial institution has doubts about the veracity or adequacy of previously obtained customer identifications.
Regarding the compliance with 9 Special Recommendations against the
financing of terrorism, most countries deal ineffectively with the
Special Recommendations related to preventive issues such as: the
wire transfers still not being adequately recorded, the non-profit
sector requiring greater control, greater effort being needed for
detecting couriers and a similar need also extending to the use of bearer instruments.
Countries Fail to Provide Resources to Supervise AML Programmes and Institutions
The absence of a strong political commitment at the level of policy
makers and legislators is a significant hindrance to the development
and implementation of a robust AML/CFT framework as well as the high
start-up and ongoing costs challenge the implementation of the
AML/CFT Regime. Law Enforcement officers also need more
police, customs agents need to stop smuggling, financial regulators
need to strengthen their regulations and politicians need to be aware
of their respective countries’ risk of terrorism and money
laundering and to provide a reasonable degree of security for the
citizens before whom they are ultimately responsible. In the long
run, investment on these resources is likely to pave the way for the fight against ML/FT.
Countries Fail to Enhance Mutual Legal Assistance, Information Sharing and Cooperation with National Sectors and those Across Borders
The authorities’ power for cooperation is affected by the
absence of clear rules. The lack of clear rules in ‘mutual
legal assistance’ renders the process of international
cooperation and the sharing of information less systematic. Some
weaknesses must be overcome in order to enhance international
cooperation. It is necessary to find gateways for sharing information
while protecting legitimate rights to privacy and taking account of
supervisors’ confidentiality obligations; sharing information
among supervisors of different sectors (eg, between banking,
securities and insurance regulators); sharing information for
regulatory, compliance, and law-enforcement purposes; solving the
complexity of multiple gateways for information exchange; and
harmonising laws and overcoming obstacles that arise in areas of
extradition, mutual legal assistance and corporate law that can undermine the fight against terrorism.
From the results we have obtained it is patent that there are
differences in attitudes and in agendas between different countries
when it comes to dealing with the same problem. ‘Problem
recognition, generation of policy proposals, and political events’
(Kingdon, 1995, p. 18), in this respect, is a key question prior to implementing the CFT strategy.
According to the World Bank and the IMF, countries are facing the
following challenges in implementing the recommended reforms: The
first challenge for AML/CFT international harmonisation is to achieve
sufficient political commitment. At the first stage, there is an
absence of strong political commitment at the level of policy makers
and legislators, which is a significant hindrance to the development
and implementation of a robust AML/CFT framework. In some countries,
the dedication of officials at the technical level of supervisory and
law enforcement authorities is hampered by a lack of political
commitment on the part of both government and parliament to pass
legislation and assign the necessary resources. The first step for a
strong political commitment lies in the ratification of the International Convention related to terrorism and ML.
It is also important to underline that a political agenda is always
evolving in time, especially in the case of FT and ML. In this
respect, it would also be interesting to understand not only how
certain topics came to be considered relevant, but also which factors
lead to change within political agendas. The difficulties in the
implementation of AML/CFT strategy lie in achieving a uniform
perception of a global problem such as ML/FT as a priority issue in
agendas the world over. Without this uniformity it is very difficult
to achieve a convergence on the harmonisation of international standards.
In addition to this agenda problem, there are others issues which
explain the failure to implement the international recommendations,
such as corruption and weak governance.
In environments where corruption is prevalent, legislators are less
likely to enact strong and effective AML/CFT laws, and key
institutions (courts, law enforcement and supervisory agencies) may
be hindered from carrying out their official duties in an effective
manner. Development of an AML/CFT Regime in such an environment also
requires the establishment of an effective anti-corruption framework.
In accordance with the above-mentioned arguments, the decision has
been taken to include those Conventions, such as the UN ratification
related to Corruption and the OECD Bribery Convention, in the list of
needed compulsory ratifications to strengthen legal systems against ML and TF.
According to the FATF:
“Effective implementation of international AML/CFT standards requires not just appropriate
legislative, regulatory and organisational structures but a robust
system of governance to ensure the integrity of the systems in places’ (FATF-GAFI, 2006, p. 7).
The FATF also points out that:
‘The link between AML/CFT and corruption is two-fold. Firstly, the proceeds of corruption which
may be considerable are susceptible to being laundered. Secondly,
corruption, and poor governance arising from corrupt institutions
(such as the judiciary, the police, or regulatory authorities) and/or
individuals, can substantially blunt the effectiveness of an AML/CFT system’ (FATF-GAFI, 2006, p. 7).
Given this, there is a critical need to develop a greater
understanding of how weak governance and corruption damage the
effectiveness of AML/CFT systems. In addition, an institutional
constraint for AMLCFT implementation is to be found in the high
start-up and ongoing costs of implementing the AML/CFT standard and
lack of resources. Regarding the cost of adopting the fight against ML and FT, Cuellar and Rider point out the following:
‘For the most part, where jurisdictions change their laws and even regulations to conform to
some standard such as the FATF’s minimum standard the political
authorities in the impacted jurisdiction retain control over budgets,
enforcement policy, and prosecutorial discretion (ie,
Bussey-discussing the Bahamas apparent failure to prioritize
anti-laundering enforcement, despite having signalled an interest in
complying with emerging international norms condemning laundering)’ (Cuellar, 2003, p. 440).
‘A serious issue in the minds of many is the price the financial and banking system is
required to pay for the strategy of taking the profit out of crime.
The costs involved in establishing, maintaining and demonstrating
compliance are considerable by any standard. What is clear is that
policing the anti-Money Laundering laws and their regulations
represents a considerable in-house cost within the financial services and banking industry’ (Rider, 2004, p. 88)
Furthermore, another institutional constraint for the implementation of AML/CFT
standards is that of the maintenance of the sovereignty on justice
and police matters. To illustrate this problem, we may take the case
of the EU. It cannot be denied that the participation in the
fight against terrorism and its financing has also proved to be an
institutional challenge for the EU.
One could propose the following quotation to summarise this section:
‘There are three domestic factors that influence the
development and implementation of CFT policy: (1) the perceptions
held by domestic political leader of the costs and benefits of CFT
policies; (2) the role of domestic political and social
constituencies in influencing the formulation and implementation of
CFT policies; and (3) the capacity of States to implement and enforce
counter-terrorism finance prescriptions’ (Giraldo et al., 2007, p. 289).
Private Actors: The Failure of the Risk Approach and the Impact of High Costs
We have argued that the effectiveness of the AML/CFT regime is based
on harmonising national legislations, for which reason it has sought
to universalise the legal requirements of the AML/CFT strategy.
Although we have said that legal requirements constitute the basis of
the AML/CFT strategy, the core of this strategy lies in the
prevention pillar based on the risk approach. Risk approach is
understood as the crucial decision for a country to determine which
entities and persons should be covered by which requirements.
Sometimes the preventive measures are only applied to financial
institutions and only applied to non-financial businesses and professions on a more limited basis.
Most legal scholars and practitioners agree with the idea that the
risk approach of the AML/CFT strategy has been unsuccessfully
implemented. Freeland (2002) insists ‘that despite the efforts
done by BCB to respond to FT introducing a risk-based approach and
also the FATF’s successful initiatives in its member countries,
many countries still had no Know Your Costumer standards at all’
(Pieth, 2002, p. 43). Freeland is one of the most important
contributors to accentuate that terrorists will try to hide
their true names behind anonymous accounts or ‘fronts’
making use of trusts, charities, nominees, corporate vehicles,
profession intermediaries, and so on, and the present researcher
agrees with him that the financial institutions (eg, banking) must
make every effort to establish the beneficial owner(s) of all accounts and persons who conduct regular business with it.
He also argues why the implementation of risk approach has been so
difficult: ‘how conducting customer due diligence is not a
simple task and is full of contradictions due to the culture of
banking’. In the case of offshore banks, the compliance officer
or risk manager in charge of customer due diligence will be in
constant conflict with the incentives provided for customer service units dedicated to personal private or offshore banking.
Others argue that another difficulty in the provision of CDD by
financial institutions in CFT is to be found in the definition of
what constitutes a terrorist or a terrorist organisation. This
classification is a difficult issue which the terrorist groups take advantage of.
Another argument for the failure of risk approach has been put
forward by Savona. He argued, like Freeland, that ‘the greatest
obstacles to international co-operation for the prevention of ML are
to be found in the area of the identification of the real beneficial
owner’ (Pieth, 2002, p. 83). He also highlights that the
main obstacle is a lack of regulation requiring full information
about the real beneficial owner of a public or private limited
company, especially when a legal entity is a shareholder or director,
or the issuance of bearer sharer is permitted. Savona and Freeland
contribute to the understanding of how corporate law could affect the
opacity/ transparency of the financial system. The ‘domino
effect’ of company law on other laws and regulations such as
criminal, administrative and banking law are, according to them, an additional factor of the failure on the risk approach.
Up to now, we have argued that factors such as the lack of
implementation of the risk approach in financial institutions and the
different corporate laws within jurisdictions have led to the failure
of the prevention pillar. Now we shall argue that this failure is
partially due to misguided efforts to implement the same risk approach policy in countries with disparate types of economy.
Among those defending this idea is Ware (2004), who states that
responding to financial abuse and achieving the stability of the
global financial system through preventive measures seems to be more
of a crisis reaction than a rational policy, for the AML/CFT is a
standardised code applied in developing and developed countries
without taking into account the preconditions of governance in each
country, thus creating a wide gap between the developed and the
developing world because this kind of reforms will add cost and complexity to business transactions.
De Goede (2004), in accordance with the idea of the social and political consequences of the war on terrorist
finance, also points out that ‘the risk approach policy which
seeks to define and classify suspicious transactions and leading
intensive surveillance is exacerbating financial exclusion, through
more stringent ‘know-your-costumer regulation’. Goede
(2004) and Passas (2004) argue that the war on terrorist finance is
affecting the communities sending informal remittances and that
‘cash’ is becoming suspect. The present researcher agrees
with Goede that the combating of FT strategy seems to be a policy to reduce the use of cash world-wide.
The question that arises here is whether the AML/CFT can be viewed as
a balanced solution that avoids unnecessary burdens on the globalised
economy. The international initiatives that run the risk approach
only constitute a suitable remedy for countries with high-quality
financial systems. In fact, it is unrealistic to establish
regulations to be implemented by developing countries with
unsatisfactory law enforcement structures, poor technology and a lack of financial culture.
The key challenges of implementing standards world-wide across
continents and countries that are at very different stages of
economic development still remain in place. If the international
community attempts to impose a prevention pillar and risk approach
that are inappropriate for a country’s level of development and
national resources, this strategy might have no effect or simply a
modest one on these countries’ compliance with international
standards. The existence of a large gap between countries that attain
a high level of compliance with the standards and those that do not
could eventually lead to countries being denied access to some financial markets (Johnston et al., 2006).
The failure of the preventive measures seems to indicate the overall
incapacity of jurisdictions to orientate the preventive
Recommendations towards the risk approach goal rather than that of
crime reduction. The preventive Recommendations and the risk approach
have only constituted a good remedy for countries with high-quality
financial systems and have also created high start-up and ongoing cost to developed and developing countries.
Other two major challenges remain in place. First, in general, the
preventive Recommendations have not been applied to all the groups of
concerns such as financial institutions, insurance and securities sector and Designated Non-Financial Businesses Professions.
All in all, it can be said that most countries have a low perception
of ML and FT risk and a great deal of financial activity is excluded
or subject only to limited controls. Consequently, a low flow of
information between public and private sectors about CDD may exist wherever the risk is not taken into account.
Other legal scholars agree that the failures of the risk approach are
due to the discourse of the IOs. They have accused the FATF of having
‘a discourse primarily oriented not so much towards risk
management as towards national and institutional obligation to reduce crime facilitation’ (Levi et al., 2002, p. 40).
Geiger et al. (2007) point out that the results of the
existing AML prevention measures are disappointing –crimes
closely connected with ML still prosper–. Meanwhile, ‘banks
being the main actors involved in ML prevention face high burdens’
(Geiger et al., 2007, p. 100). Moreover, they admit that the
rule-based approach could not follow the new methods and technologies
used by money launderers and the regulators failed to ‘formulate
detailed ML criteria’ (Geiger et al., 2007, p. 100).
In line with the failure of regulated approach failure, Ross et
al. (2007) observe that overregulation, which often replaces
regulation, leads to additional costs, inflexibility and poor
regulatory performance (Ross et al., 2007, p. 107). As has
been discussed in this dissertation, the main focus of AML compliance
is placed on financial institutions (banks) rather than the meaning of collective action.
Furthermore, some authors cite reporting overload as the main
disadvantage of the regulation. Jackman (2004) notes that ‘there
is a fine line between regulation and overregulation’ (Jackman,
2004, p. 106). He agrees that ‘overregulation can worsen the
results achieved from ML prevention’ (Jackman, 2004, p. 109).
But the most important contribution of Jackman is that one important
effect of regulation is that the practitioners tend to decrease their
willingness to find AML/CFT solutions. In connection with the
argument of excessive regulation, Edwards et al. (2004) argue
that ‘there is a need for the regulator and banks to work as partners’ (Edwards et al., 2004, p. 223).
Examples of countries with a rule-based regulation are provided by
Pieth (2004). According to him, some large financial centres (UK and
US) place more emphasis on an ‘early warning system’ with
the recording of everyday transactions and the reporting of unusual
or suspicious circumstances for future strategic and tactical use by
the police or similar authorities, whereas in other large financial
centres (ie, Switzerland), the AML-system is far less oriented
towards data collection for intelligence and law enforcement purposes.
Finally, we should outline that the failure of the prevention pillar
could be attributed to cost benefits arguments: that while the cost
of ML prevention for the society and financial institutions are high,
the benefits are not clearly seen. There is no data on ML showing
that an adequate regulatory control reduces the ML taking place. The
benefits of compliance are usually seen as ‘flowing from the
costs that are otherwise avoided’ (Harvey, 2004, p. 336). The
benefit of compliance lies in the possibility of avoiding severe sanctions from the regulator.
What Would be the Most Effective Strategy to Tackle the Financing of Terrorism?
In conclusion, it is safe to say that terrorist are still able to
raise, move, store and access funds with relative ease and the threat
terrorist groups pose to the international community could be
dramatically increased. The international cooperation is far from
being up to the task of efficiently dealing with the financing of
terrorism, for the failings pointed out in the present article such
as: the failure of deterrent effects, the lack of preventive
intelligence and the incapacity to deny terrorist groups easy access
to financing them (disrupting tool). The challenges in strengthening
the International Regime to Combat the Financing of Terrorism conceal
the reality of three tensions that hinder progress in this direction.
The first of these tensions lies between financial regulation and
political will, while the second tension is that of the difficult
interaction between international standards and their domestic
implementation. The third tension, operating at the domestic level,
occurs between government and financial and non-financial institutions.
The future international cooperation in the fight against the
financing of terrorism must not merely stem from the relations
between states, but also from enhancing an interaction between
domestic and international games and coalitions such as transnational
regulatory networks and financial institutions spanning national
boundaries. This cooperation model is the only one that may
successfully initiate a reliable process of negotiation and
socialisation with havens so as to open the possibility for them to become better regulated countries rather than havens.
Against this background, a double step strategy is needed to overcome
the failings and discrepancies between countries in building a more
coordinated global strategy against the FT. In the first step, the
States should recognise that they have failed to pay attention
to the adequate criminalisation of FT, to establish a clear approach
towards informal transfer systems, to establish consistent freezing
of assets and an approach towards international legal cooperation.
This strategy must, first, achieve a common definition of terrorism
and a strict definition of the FT; secondly, convince all
stakeholders that action is required at the global level; thirdly,
ensure true commitment and a resolute political will in CFT; and
fourth, take into account the increasing global nexus between crime
and terror and its negative effect, in addition to becoming aware of
the fact that terrorists continue to use Failed States and
jurisdictions which slow down the implementation of the AML/CFT Regime.
It also seems necessary to create a global index of country
vulnerability/risk to FT in order to improve the capacity of
international community to monitor and control key havens used by terrorist financiers.
To accomplish these objectives, the following measures can be used to
put pressure on the entire world system because there still remain
loopholes in the area of financial regulation. As the ML/FT problem
is global in nature, measures should be once again implemented, in
accordance with the FATF, in order to put an end to the detrimental
rules and practices evidenced by this paper. More counter-measures
such as the negotiations with uncooperative jurisdictions should be
started up again when FATF members and non-members fail to cooperate
in combating the financing of terrorism. Some norms should be
designed to protect economies against money of unlawful origin;
specific requirements should be made for financial institutions in
FATF members to pay special attention to, or report on, financial
transactions conducted with individuals or legal entities having
their account at financial institutions established in a
‘non-cooperative jurisdiction’; there should be
conditioning, restricting, targeting or even prohibiting of financial transactions with non-cooperative jurisdictions.
Part of this process of financial regulation should aim to improve
the implementation of the complementary standards of AML/CFT such as
those provide by Basle Committee on Banking Regulation, International
Association of Insurance Supervisors (IAIS) and International
Organisation of Securities Commissions (IOSCO) because they
pave the way for the customer due diligence. National regulatory
authorities and finance ministers are strongly encouraged to adapt
and enhance existing mechanisms for international regulatory and
supervisory coordination. The FATF and FATF-Style Regional Bodies are
also obliged to establish a non-compliance policy response in the
case of a jurisdiction with low rates of integrity standards
compliance. The UN should revitalise the awareness-raising campaigns
of the Counter-Terrorism Committee, given the significant role of
this institution in CFT strategy. In addition, the international
community should extend AML/CFT to fight corruption, incorporating
new Recommendations focused on the control of corrupted practices in
accordance with the 2003 UN Convention. In addition, complementary
policies and strategies should be designed at an international level
in areas being exploited by terrorist groups since certain aspects
are insufficiently covered by the AML/CFT Regimes such as trade,
corporate law, oil smuggling, maritime businesses and humanitarian aid and border controls.
A second step would be to redesign the strategy taking into account
not only previous weaknesses but also recognising that one size model
does not fit all, especially when there are cash economies and failed
States involved. The following points must be taken into account when
building up the new strategy. First, the design and prioritisation of
policy is an important point and it is also problematic because the
goals of risk avoidance and related casualties are very difficult to
measure. It is necessary to reject the traditional cost benefit
analysis since a policy of combating FT consists in managing
uncertainty and imprecise threats. Secondly, at this point the
risk-based approach to CFT must be redefined and implemented
differently, because a high number of Recommendations from
international bodies have created a maze of requirements that overlaps efforts and undermines efficiency.
A high level Interagency is needed to lead the national efforts on
CFT strategy. Peer evaluation (mutual evaluation report) should be
revised, making it comparable in the long run without preventing
methodological improvements. International Organisations should study
whether it is a necessary technical assistance to start a security
sector reform before implementing an International Regime such as the
AML/CFT. The policy makers should design a strategy to manage and map
different levels of analysis (EU, National and Cross Borders); then
they should think about determining the main information requirements
of CFT stakeholders. This change of strategy would compel the
international organisation to provide clear policy guidance to the private sector.
There is a question of how much information law enforcement agencies
should give to the regulated financial sector in order to maximise
the efficiency of data collection, and thus contribute to keeping
financial institutions informed of the new patterns, indicators and
typologies relevant to fighting against Terrorist Financing. The
complexity of Terrorist Financing requires a coordination of public
and private sectors, and law enforcement and intelligence agencies
need to give advice to financial institutions and designated non financial businesses professions on what kind of data they need.
An enhancement of public cooperation is also necessary. In the case
of prosecutions, one of the largest challenges law enforcement faces
is that of compiling evidence around a case of terrorism. There is a
large amount of information that will never be seen in a courtroom
because it cannot be verified. There is a conflict between collecting
evidence for courts (law enforcement) and collecting information to
inform a government (intelligence agencies). This conflict must be
solved by an improved construction of a CFT strategy. Information
exchange is another fundamental component of the CFT. There still
remain legal barriers when two or more jurisdictions are involved and
when gathering information in one country is a criminal offence if
data privacy and bank secrecy laws remain in place. This poses many
restrictions on which institutions can disclose data in their possession, eg, SWIFT.
The current legal framework is not designed to deal efficiently with
the CFT, because financial institutions must comply with five
institutions, regulators, law enforcement agencies, internal
management and employee conscience, and society. There still exist
formal channels not disclosing information and resulting in
inefficient and ineffective practices. All these points should be
taken into account to genuinely deter FT. Nevertheless, the key that
would make it all feasible is to overcome weak governance, for weak
governance impedes the development of a domestic Regime on AML/CFT as
well as the harmonisation of domestics Regimes, which is the real disease of the efficiency of international regulatory standards.
Concepción Verdugo-Yepes
PhD in Economics and International Law from the University of
Barcelona and Milan’s Bocconi University, a member of Research
Group on International Economic Organisation at the University of
Barcelona at the time of writing this Working Paper and currently a
Research Officer in the IMF’s Financial Integrity Group
ANNEX I. Profile of the Overall Compliance of 46 Countries with FATF Recommendations
FATF Recommendations |
Compliant
(%) |
Largely
Compliant
(%) |
Partially
Compliant
(%) |
Not
Compliant
(%) |
Missing
Values
(%) |
Assessed
Jurisdictions
in
number |
1.ML offence |
6.5 |
47.8 |
43.5 |
2.2 |
0 |
46 |
2.ML offence-mental element and corporate liability |
30.4 |
41.3 |
26.1 |
2.2 |
0 |
46 |
3.Confiscation and provisional measures |
15.2 |
50.0 |
32.6 |
2.2 |
0 |
46 |
4.Secrecy laws consistent with the Recommendations |
58.7 |
37.0 |
4.3 |
0 |
0 |
46 |
5.Customer due diligence |
0 |
13.0 |
71.5 |
15.2 |
0 |
46 |
6.Politically exposed persons |
0 |
19.6 |
26.1 |
54.3 |
0 |
46 |
7.Correspondent banking |
10.9 |
21.7 |
17.4 |
50.0 |
0 |
46 |
8.New technologies & non face-to face business |
17.4 |
19.6 |
34.8 |
28.3 |
0 |
46 |
9.Third parties and introducers |
13.0 |
15.2 |
28.3 |
17.4 |
26.1 |
46 |
10.Record keeping |
32.6 |
37.0 |
26.1 |
4.3 |
0 |
46 |
11.Unusual transactions |
13,0 |
28.3 |
37.0 |
21.7 |
0 |
46 |
12.DNFBP-R.5,6,8-11 |
0 |
0 |
52,2 |
47.8 |
0 |
46 |
13.Suspicious transaction reporting |
6.5 |
30.4 |
54.2 |
10.9 |
0 |
46 |
14. Protection no tipping-off |
56.5 |
21.7 |
19.6 |
2.2 |
0 |
46 |
15.Internal controls, compliance& audit |
6.5 |
39.1 |
47.8 |
6.5 |
0 |
46 |
16.DNFBP-R.13-15&21 |
0 |
6.5 |
50.0 |
43.5 |
0 |
46 |
17.Sanctions |
0 |
37.0 |
54.3 |
8.7 |
0 |
46 |
18.Shell Banks |
26.1 |
37.0 |
30.4 |
6.5 |
0 |
46 |
19.Other forms of reporting |
58.7 |
17.4 |
8.7 |
15.2 |
0 |
46 |
20.Other NFBP & secure transaction techniques |
43.5 |
19.6 |
10.9 |
23.9 |
2.2 |
46 |
21.Special attention for higher risk countries |
15.2 |
21.7 |
32.6 |
30.4 |
0 |
46 |
22.Foreign branches & subsidiaries |
8.7 |
30.4 |
30.4 |
26.1 |
4.3 |
46 |
23.Regulation, supervision and monitoring |
0 |
30.4 |
60.9 |
8.7 |
0 |
46 |
24.DNFBP-regulation,supervision and monitoring |
0 |
8.7 |
34.8 |
56.5 |
0 |
46 |
25.Guidelines& feedback |
6.5 |
21.7 |
39.1 |
32.6 |
0 |
46 |
26.The FIU |
6.5 |
52.2 |
26.1 |
15.2 |
0 |
46 |
27.Law enforcement authorities |
30.4 |
37.0 |
26.1 |
6.5 |
0 |
46 |
28.Powers of competent authorities |
65.2 |
21.7 |
13.0 |
0 |
0 |
46 |
29.Supervisors |
15.2 |
41.3 |
39.1 |
4.3 |
0 |
46 |
30.Resources, integrity and training |
2.2 |
43.5 |
45.7 |
8.7 |
0 |
46 |
31.National co-operation |
15.2 |
43.5 |
34.8 |
6.5 |
0 |
46 |
32.Statitstics |
0 |
28.3 |
47.8 |
23.9 |
0 |
46 |
33.Legal persons beneficial owners |
10..9 |
19.6 |
50.0 |
19.6 |
0 |
46 |
34.Legal arrangements beneficial owners |
10.9 |
13.0 |
21.7 |
13.0 |
41.3 |
46 |
35.Convention |
8.7 |
45.7 |
45.7 |
0 |
0 |
46 |
36.Mutual Legal Assistance(MLA) |
26.1 |
52.2 |
19.6 |
2.2 |
0 |
46 |
37.Dual criminality |
45.7 |
34.8 |
15.2 |
4.3 |
0 |
46 |
38.MLA on confiscation and freezing |
21.7 |
39.1 |
34.8 |
4.3 |
0 |
46 |
39.Extradition |
45.7 |
39.1 |
6.5 |
8.7 |
0 |
46 |
40.Other forms of cooperation |
2.2 |
4.3 |
2.2 |
91.3 |
0 |
46 |
Source: author’s calculations using data from mutual evaluations; Verdugo (2008a).
Annex II. Profile of the Overall Compliance with Nine Special Recommendations on Terrorist Financing
Nine Special
Recommendations |
Compliant
(%) |
Largely
Compliant
(%) |
Partially
Compliant
(%) |
Not
Compliant
(%) |
Missing
Values
(%) |
Assessed
Jurisdictions
in number |
SR.I. Implement UN Instruments |
8.7 |
23.9 |
52.2 |
15.2 |
0 |
46 |
SR.II. Criminalise Terrorist Financing |
8.7 |
32.6 |
37.0 |
21.7 |
0 |
46 |
SR.III. Freeze /confiscate terror ass |
2.2 |
19.6 |
50 |
28.3 |
0 |
46 |
SR.IV. Suspicious transaction report |
8.7 |
30.4 |
23.9 |
37.0 |
0 |
46 |
SR.V. International Cooperation |
13.0 |
45.7 |
26.1 |
15.2 |
0 |
46 |
SV.V.I. Requirements for money transfer |
15.2 |
32.6 |
34.8 |
15.2 |
2.2 |
46 |
SR.VII. Wire transfer rules |
8.7 |
15.2 |
34.8 |
41.3 |
0 |
46 |
SR.VIII. Non-profit organisations |
10.9 |
19.6 |
39.1 |
30.4 |
0 |
46 |
SR.IX. Bearer instruments |
6.5 |
8.7 |
34.8 |
37.0 |
13.0 |
46 |
Source: Verdugo (2008a)
Annex III. The Jurisdictions’ Overall Compliance Scores
Cod |
Jurisdictions |
Overall
Compliance
AML/CFT
Store |
Cod |
Jurisdictions |
Overall
Compliance
AML/CFT
Store |
ALB |
Albania |
59 |
NPL |
Nepal |
16 |
AUS |
Australia |
77 |
NOR |
Norway |
87 |
BHR |
Bahrain |
75 |
PAN |
Panama |
99 |
BLR |
Belarus |
54 |
PRY |
Paraguay |
55 |
BEL |
Belgium |
109 |
PER |
Peru |
93 |
BOL |
Bolivia |
38 |
PRT |
Portugal |
93 |
BRN |
Brunei |
55 |
SAM |
Samoa |
40 |
CHL |
Chile |
73 |
SVK |
Slovakia |
50 |
COL |
Colombia |
80 |
SVN |
Slovenia |
100 |
CYP |
Cyprus |
105 |
ESP |
Spain |
86 |
DNK |
Denmark |
73 |
LKA |
Sri
Lanka |
41 |
DOM |
Dominican
Republic |
43 |
SDN |
Sudan |
22 |
FJI |
Fiji |
67 |
SWE |
Sweden |
76 |
GIB |
Gibraltar |
92 |
CHE |
Switzerland |
88 |
HUN |
Hungary |
112 |
SYR |
Syria |
57 |
ISL |
Iceland |
70 |
TUR |
Turkey |
55 |
IND |
India |
53 |
URY |
Uruguay |
52 |
IRL |
Ireland |
87 |
USA |
US |
103 |
ITA |
Italy |
92 |
VUT |
Vanuatu |
49 |
JAM |
Jamaica |
76 |
GRB |
UK |
109 |
LVA |
Latvia |
79 |
GRC |
Greece |
49 |
LTU |
Lithuania |
87 |
CHN |
China |
68 |
MRT |
Mauritania |
44 |
GEO |
Georgia |
57 |
Source: Verdugo (2008a).
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