Global actors gather to forge a common front against illicit trade
The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (www.unctad.org) has said that the global economy loses more than US$2 trillion annually due to illicit trade.
To address this alarming problem, UNCTAD and the Transnational Alliance to Combat Illicit Trade (TRACIT) are convening the first-ever Illicit Trade Forum on 3 and 4 February at the Palais des Nations in Geneva.
UNCTAD states that smuggling, counterfeiting, trafficking of humans and wildlife and other forms of illicit trade that hold back progress on the global development agenda.
It organisation noted that the forum is designed to encourage an open dialogue among representatives from Member States, experts and non-governmental observers.
The aim to share expertise, promote international enforcement cooperation, coordinate resources and ensure countries are adequately equipped to mitigate illicit trade.
“Illicit trade endangers all aspects of development and all 17 of the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
“It creates a triple threat to the financing of development: crowding out legitimate economic activity, depriving governments of revenues for investment in vital public services and increasing the costs of achieving the SDGs by eroding the progress already made,” UNCTAD Secretary-General Mukhisa Kituyi said.
TRACIT Director-General, Jeffrey Hardy, added: “Given the scale and damaging effects of illicit trade, a coordinated and sustained global response by governments and companies is urgently needed.”
The international response to illicit trade is largely fragmented among many sectors vulnerable to illicit trade, which necessitates a joint approach that considers the interconnected nature of the problem, commonalities and points of convergence among its various manifestations.
“Every country is feeling the malignant effects of illicit trade, underscoring the need for expanded partnerships and cooperation among governments to push back against this deterrent to global sustainable development,” said Pamela Coke-Hamilton, UNCTAD’s Director of International Trade.
Magnitude of illicit trade
Illicit trade drains nearly 3% of the world’s economy. If it were a country, its dark economy would be larger than Brazil, Italy and Canada – and as large as Mexico and Indonesia combined.
It endangers public health, as sub-standard and fake antimalarial medicines alone cause more than 100,000 deaths per year in Sub-Saharan Africa.
Illicit trade also pushes endangered species to the brink of extinction and causes irreversible damage to ecosystems. For instance, illegal logging, with an estimated annual value of up to $157 billion, is the world’s most profitable crime involving natural resources.
Further, it threatens the rule of law, owing to its links with organized crime – from human trafficking networks and tobacco smuggling to the involvement of organized criminal groups in fuel theft and the trade of counterfeit goods.
Even more frightening are the links to terrorist financing that heighten threats to national and global security.
Defending the SDGs together
Experts at the forum will deliberate how to act together to defend the SDGs against the onslaught of illicit trade.
They will explore the different methods used to measure illicit trade and identify common approaches by governments and industry actors to counter this problem and deter associated illegal activities, like money laundering.
Participants will examine the role of the private sector in ensuring that illicit trade does not compromise the integrity of legitimate markets or jeopardize the well-being of consumers.
The forum will discuss how stakeholders can better deter illegal trade across sectors, address vulnerabilities in supply chain systems, report criminal activity, promote sustainable resource management and protect against forced labour and other human rights abuses.
It is expected to generate a roadmap for collective action by government, business and other stakeholders, including a call for shared policy guidelines and a process to ensure Member States benefit from intergovernmental experiences and expertise.
Facts and estimated figures on illicit trade according to Mapping the Impact of Illicit Trade on the SDGs report by TRACIT shows that up to 5% of goods imported to the European Union are fake.
The data reveals that imports of counterfeit and pirated goods are worth nearly $500 billion a year.
It states that fake, substandard, smuggled and illegal agri-foods cost the global food industry an estimated $30 billion to $40 billion each year.
The data also revealed that the Ivory Coast lost about 125,000 tons of cocoa to smuggling in the 2017- 2018 season, equivalent to 9% of the harvest – a significant loss in a country where cocoa accounts for 20% of exports.
It stressed that one in four alcohol bottles worldwide are illicit, representing 25.8% of all global consumption.
“Global losses to illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing are estimated at between $15 billion and $36 billion, representing 14 to 33% of global marine capture value”, the report shows.
In the health sector, between 72,000 and 169,000 children may be dying from pneumonia every year after receiving ineffective illicit medicines.
Also in the mining industry, South Africa’s illegal trade in precious metals is estimated at $1.3 billion a year, a significant drain on the country’s GDP, export and trade balances.
The report provides that illegally extracted gold and platinum alone cost the legal industry 5% to 10% of its annual production, according to South Africa’s Chamber of Mines.
“Illegal gold mining in Ghana degrades forests, pollutes around 75% of the waterways and erodes biodiversity. The water contaminated with heavy metals has resulted in cases of poisoning”, it reckoned.
Global actors gather By Julius Alagbe