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Don't
ignore the role of the rich countries in developing country corruption
Centre
for Global Development
June 25, 2007
http://www.cgdev.org/content/general/detail/13938
Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala,
the former finance minister and minister of foreign affairs of Nigeria,
has called on the U.S. and other rich countries to pay greater attention
to the ways in which their policies and practices undermine anti-corruption
efforts in the developing world.
Developing countries
themselves must lead the fight against developing country corruption,
she said. But rich countries, too, must consider how they sometimes
"aid and abet" corruption that hurts poor people and costs
developing countries billions of dollars.
Okonjo-Iweala spoke at
the second annual Sabot Memorial Lecture, which honors the memory
of Richard "Dick" Sabot, a farmer, Internet pioneer, and
development economist who was a founding member of the Center for
Global Development (CGD) board of directors.
"At the end of the
day, developing countries need to take ownership of the fight against
corruption themselves, as they can least afford to be corrupt given
their resource constraints," she said. "A frontal assault
on corruption requires a comprehensive strategy, as any piecemeal
approaches may only serve to re-direct corruption to other sectors
of the economy."
As finance minister in
Nigeria from 2003-2006, Okonjo-Iweala led the team that brokered
Nigeria's historic $36 billion debt deal, Africa's largest debt
relief package and the second largest debt relief package in the
world after Iraq. She also instituted the practice of publishing
in the newspapers each month the Nigerian federal government's allocations
to Nigeria's states, using transparency to fight corruption.
Okonjo-Iweala was named
a TIME Magazine "Hero of the Year" in 2004, for her efforts
to bring openness, transparency and accountability to government
financing and operations. She received the Euromarket Forum Award
for Vision and Courage in 2003 and is currently a distinguished
visiting fellow with the Brookings Institution.
Robert Zoellick and Nancy
BirdsallMore than 130 development policy practitioners and scholars
attended the lecture in the Fred Bergsten Conference Center at the
Peterson Institute for International Economics. Robert Zoellick,
the U.S. nominee to become the next president of the World Bank,
sat in the front row, taking careful notes.
Also attending the lecture
were members of the Sabot family, including Oliver Sabot, who spoke
about his father's legacy of "gratitude and radical optimism;"
Edward W. Scott, Jr., CGD co-founder and chairman of the board of
directors; and CGD president Nancy Birdsall.
Okonjo-Iweala said that
there were four ways in which developed countries could support
developing countries' fight against corruption. (See Okonjo-Iweala's
prepared remarks.)
First, she said, was
to look beyond economic and financial corruption to consider political
corruption--specifically the use of ill-gotten gains to fund elections.
"If the West is serious about supporting multiparty democracy
in developing countries, then why not look at the issue of campaign
finance?" she said. Disclosure of campaign finances was an
important step, but ultimately public financing of campaigns would
be a better solution, she said.
Sabot family and Nancy
BirdsallThe second area is assisting in tracking and repatriating
stolen funds that are laundered and hidden in rich world banks.
In Nigeria, for example, from 1993 to 1998 the Sani Abacha regime
looted and sent abroad an estimated $3 billion to $5 billion, much
of it to Swiss banks. (Switzerland has since agreed to repatriate
about $500 million of the frozen funds.)
A third area, she said,
is bribery prevention. Okonjo-Iweala cited Financial Times press
reports that describe how an international consortium that included
Kellogg, Brown and Root, the Halliburton subsidiary, obtained a
lucrative $12 billion oil and gas project in Nigeria after hiring
a "consulting" firm and discussing making payments of
$180 million to the foreign accounts of Nigerian officials. "You
can surmise that Nigerians collectively paid the price in terms
of higher costs for this diversion of contract monies into private
pockets,"" she said.
Finally, she said, rich
countries must set a good example. "The moral authority of
developed countries in the battle against corruption is weakened
when these countries condone corruption in their own countries,
and yet expect developing countries to tackle corruption more severely,"
she said.
"Giving kleptocrats
in developing countries an opportunity to point to cases of corruption
in the U.S. legislature, or with U.K. defense contracts, or with
German manufacturers, truly undermines the fight against corruption
in all our countries!"
Okonjo-Iweala urged CGD
to begin researching how rich countries can do a better job in supporting
developing countries- fight against corruption, particularly
in the first area of political corruption.
Birdsall thanked Okonjo-Iweala
and said that the Center would do its best to make a substantive,
practical contribution in this important area.
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