(不寻常的)嫌疑人?探讨非法资金流动、俄罗斯洗钱和波罗的海国家依赖金融化之间的联系

Leonardo Pataccini
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本文以波罗的海国家为探索性案例分析了非法资金流动、洗钱和依赖金融化之间的联系。自从恢复独立以来,爱沙尼亚、拉脱维亚和立陶宛卷入了几起大规模的洗钱丑闻,非法资金主要来自俄罗斯以及其他前苏联共和国。目前,鉴于俄罗斯入侵乌克兰,这些事件呈现出新的层面。直到最近,流行的说法是,波罗的海国家的非法资金流动和洗钱活动是金融体系未能监测和发现这些活动的结果。然而,本文认为,波罗的海国家的洗钱和非法资金流动远非一个简单的缺点,而是依赖金融化的产物,主要表现在两个方面:首先,在导致全球金融危机的十年中,这些国家的整体经济表现和金融行为者的回报变得依赖于外国资本流入。这种依赖性是使非法资金流动和洗钱活动得以从后苏联地区流入的关键,特别是在危机之后。其次,由于其比较优势和在国际金融体系中的从属地位,波罗的海国家的银行业被用作前苏联资金洗钱全球金融网络的中介,承担了大部分的金融、法律和声誉风险。最后,研究还指出了新风险的出现。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The (un)usual suspects? Exploring the links between illicit financial flows, Russian money laundering and dependent financialization in the Baltic states
The paper analyses the links between illicit financial flows, money laundering and dependent financialization using the Baltic states as exploratory case studies. Since the restoration of their independence, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania have been involved in several massive money laundering scandals, with illicit funds flowing mainly from Russia, as well as other former Soviet Republics. Currently, these episodes have taken on a new dimension in light of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Until recently, the prevailing narrative was that illicit financial flows and money laundering in the Baltic states resulted from a failure in the financial system’s ability to monitor and detect these operations. However, this paper argues that far from being a simple shortcoming, money laundering and illicit financial flows in the Baltic states are products of dependent financialization in two main ways: first, in the decade leading up to the global financial crisis, the overall economic performance and the returns of financial actors in these countries became dependent on foreign capital inflows. This dependency was key to enabling the arrival of illicit financial flows and money laundering from the post-Soviet space, especially after the crisis. Second, due to its comparative advantages and its subordinate position in the international financial system, the banking sector of the Baltic states was used as an intermediary in global financial networks of money laundering for funds from the former USSR, where it assumed most of the financial, legal and reputational risks. Finally, the research also points to the emergence of new risks.
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