HARARE - Sep 08 2010 18:52
http://www.newsday.co.zw/article/2010-09-08-money-laundering-not-a-victimless-crime
In a week in which R’n’B megastar Alliaune Badara Thiam (Akon), dancehall superstar Ryan Henriques (Sean Paul) and Windies cricket legend Brian Lara were in town, even FSS couldn’t help a bit of indulgence by officially taking notice of these “kings of bling” in this financial column.
For those familiar with this writer, the mention of music should hardly be surprising as it is — particularly jazz music — a labour of love.
But rest assured that we will not be veering into music territory in this week’s instalment of FSS. The only reason for mentioning it is that it made the past week an auspicious one.
A day after Akon jetted into the country, something equally significant also caught my attention – government was reported to have rejected a $50 billion loan from a company called Norange Capital Markets of South Africa after security checks revealed that this largesse might be dirty and the company may have been attempting to do some laundry work. In street lingo, Winky D would call it “kuwachisa madinga”.
Immediately, I knew I had the subject of this week’s edition of FSS; the substance or lack thereof of the offer was another matter altogether. For me the allegations of money laundering were adequately eye-catching, if not eye-popping.
Anyway, as you might have wondered, why didn’t government just accept the money and solve its many problems? After all the loan was payable over a whopping 30 years and subject to a negotiable annual interest rate of only 3%!
Imagine what the tidy sum of $50 billion would have achieved, practically overnight. For starters government would have taken care of its debt of $7,1 billion by refinancing it at a lower cost and for a longer repayment period.
Secondly, government would have finally increased civil servants’ salaries (it’s decidedly bad economics to borrow for consumption, but what can one do with no other meaningful source of development aid, apart from “eating what one kills”?) and could certainly have speeded up quite a number of infrastructural projects, particularly in the power sector.
So what exactly is this animal that answers to the name Money Laundering, which caused government to pass up what, to all intents and purposes, appeared to be financial manna? Money laundering is the process of making criminal assets appear legitimate.