Globalization, Corruption, and the Illicit Market

YaleGlobal has an article up on their website highlighting the connection between Globalization, Corruption, and the illicit market.

The author, Branko Milanovic of the World Bank, writes about how organized crime, wealthy from the gains of the illicit market, “lobbies” the government as any other industry would do.

Once organized crime and its supporters become the largest employers in the country, they play the same role that a more conventional business plays in other countries. They try to influence the political process. Moreover, they need to control the political arena - election of presidents and parliaments - even more tightly than “normal” business people because their very existence depends on having a government willing to tolerate violation of international rules as the country’s main activity.

The author argues that unless the profits from the illicit markets are addressed in the DEMAND countries, then any attempt to curb corruption in the developing world would fall short.

The key is that meaningful reforms do not begin in the corrupt states themselves, but in the rich world that is the main consumer of illegal goods and services. This requires a total overhaul in our thinking about the root cause of a corrupt state. Many of the most corrupt states are “corrupt” because they specialize in goods and services that are deemed illegal. But what is illegal today is not necessarily illegal tomorrow. “Illegality” is a historical category, as the long history of accepted prostitution and drug use shows. Thus if illegality is the main cause of corrupt governments, then the best way to root out corruption is to remove illegality.

The way to help corrupt countries does not lie in hectoring them about the virtue of good governance, but in pushing for the legalization of their main exports. The target constituency of the international organizations’ advocacy thus becomes the rich, not the poor, world.

Read the whole article here.