President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has admonished African governments to build robust financial compliance systems and ensure its strict enforcement, to protect and optimise the resources at the continent’s disposal.
He said for Africa to be able to transform herself, and become the epitome of economic empowerment and self-reliance, she needs to have the wherewithal to ensure effective resource management, and to prevent illicit outflows from the continent.
Speaking on the theme: “Financial Crime Compliance and ESG-The Future of African Investment”, at the EBII Africa Investments Risk and Compliance (IRC) Summit at the weekend, at the University of Oxford, the President referenced a recent report that put the cost of financial crime compliance across all financial institutions, globally, at an all-time high of $180.9 billion for the year 2020.
He pointed out that part of the reality in Africa was that there were huge illicit financial outflows, as captured in the 2015 Thabo Mbeki report on Illicit Financial Flows from Africa, which revealed that Africa was losing, annually, more than $50 billion through illicit financial outflows.
“Five years later, according to UNCTAD’s Economic Development in Africa Report 2020, the figure has gone up from US$50 billion to $88.6 billion each year. That is a lot of money in any currency, and it is money we ill-afford to forego. It is money that would make a significant addition to the investable funds of the continent,” he said.
President Akufo-Addo stated that persons, largely the multinational companies, who come to do business in Africa, are involved in these illicit transactions, with the complicity of some Africans.
“We must, therefore, build robust financial compliance systems, and ensure strict enforcement as a deterrent. A strong regulatory environment, whilst reducing these illicit outflows, would, in the end, lead to more private capital being attracted to the continent for genuine investment,” he added.
The President noted the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development’s (OECD) new initiative that would require multinationals to pay tax in countries where they have commercial, not jurisdictional, presence, was a welcome enterprise, saying, the “acid test of our friendship with countries, which are the hosts of these multinational corporations, should be the extent to which they oblige them to comply with this new initiative.”
He was pleased that the G7 Nations had accepted the OECD’s initiative, and backed the principle with a proposal for a 15% minimum tax rate for multinational groups on their revenues from the countries of operation.
We, in Africa, must be both vocal in defence of our interests, and vigorous in promoting remedial measures,” he stressed.
Whilst expressing relief that Ghana had been removed from the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) ‘Grey List”, following the renewal of the international community’s confidence in Ghana’s Anti-Money Laundering and Countering the Financing of Terrorism regime, President Akufo-Addo pointed out that many of the regulatory requirements put in place are cumbersome and expensive for small countries.
“For example, the FATF’s Recommendation 32 requires countries to take measures to prevent terrorists and criminals from using cash couriers to finance their activities, and launder their funds. Countries are required to implement a compulsory declaration system requiring everyone crossing a border and transporting currency or bearer negotiable instruments of a value exceeding a certain threshold to declare it to the authorities. To Africa’s predominantly cash-based economies, this is a daunting task.
“You might, thus, find your country falling foul of the regulations, not because you have done anything wrong, but because you do not have the means to keep up with the paperwork. It would be worthwhile for all stakeholders to agree on efficient, workable measures. And yet, there is not really an option of opting out,” he stated, reiterating “we would have to demonstrate that we can play by the rules, just as the investors should, and, thereby, safeguard the future of African investments,” if Africa is to be an integral part of the financial world.