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Trapped in Illicit Finance: How abusive tax and trade practices harm human rights

  • 2019
  • Dr Matti Kohonen (lead author), Abena Yirenkyiwa Afari, Prof Attiya Waris, Marcos Lopes-Filho, Mike Lewis, Neeti Biyani, Sakshi Rai, Tomás Julio Lukin, Dr Uddhab Pyakurel

In this report, Christian Aid, Centre for Budget and Governance Accountability and Fundación SES, members of the Financial Transparency Coalition, urges developed nations and the UN to stop tolerating the abusive flows of money that robs developing countries of the necessary revenue.They propose a simple solution for plugging some of this funding gap: we must stop tolerating the abusive, unethical, immoral illicit financial flows (IFFs) that rob the poor to enrich the wealthy.

On September 26, 2019, world leaders will gather at the UN General Assembly (UNGA) in New York, for high-level talks on finance for development. One burning question on the agenda is the financial chasm facing the sustinable development goals (SDGs).

Adopted by the UNGA in 2015, the 17 goals offer a roadmap for ending poverty, protecting the planet and ensuring prosperity for all, by 2030. But with little over a decade to go, vast amounts of public and private finance still need to be found if they are to be realised within the timeframe. The funding gap for delivering the goals from private sector sources alone is estimated at $2.5tn.

 

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