Global Service Corps

The Short Term Alternative to the Peace Corps

  Founded in 1993, Global Service Corps (GSC) is a non-profit leader in service learning and overseas volunteer programs and international internships in Tanzania, Thailand and Cambodia. GSC is built on the participation of its volunteer participants, staff, and advisors both in the developed and developing countries of the world. GSC’s programs are ground ...learn more

GROUP DETAILS

Created: May 23, 2008

Updated: Nov 28, 2009

Membership: Open

Semi-Private

 
Created: May 22, 2007
Updated: May 22, 2007
Viewed: 115 times
Page Status: active
  •  
Not Yet Rated

VIDEO - Capitalism's Achilles Heel

Resource Info   Edit

Type: Video
 
Website: http://info.worldbank.org/etoo...
 
Author: Ray Baker
 
Publisher: B-SPAN
 
Date published: Wed, Mar 29, 2006
 
Keywords: World Bank, International Development, Trade, Corruption
 

Network [Add] · [List] · [Visualize]

Connected with 0 organizations
Connected with 1 person
Sm_avatar
Connected with 0 resources
Connected with 0 solutions
Connected with 0 jobs
Connected with 0 events
Connected with 0 wikipages

 

About  [Edit]

In this informative 93-minute video, Ray Baker describes the weaknesses of our conventional capitalist system to the World Bank.

Development faces enough barriers without having money skimmed from its trade interactions—but that’s exactly the problem caused by money laundering and monetary loopholes. An expert on illegal and illicit financial flows between countries, Ray Baker presented his book, “Capitalism’s Achilles Heel” to the World Bank on March 31, 2006, as an examination of the difficulties caused by cooked books across borders. The panel, which was sponsored by the World Bank InfoShop, was convened at Bank headquarters and chaired by Jo Marie Griesgraber, Executive Director of the New Rules for Global Finance Coalition.

Baker opened by discussing schemes for moving cash outside of domestic markets through price fixing, which sparked his investigations into corruption and money laundering. He commented on other strategies and loopholes used to move and hide financial flows, sorted into corrupt, commercial and criminal categories. Baker also detailed how these faulty transactions can cause larger financial errors, all the way up to totals of gross domestic product. In the second part of his presentation, Baker stated that money laundering is the most damaging financial condition afflicting the global poor.

In response, Mark Weisbrot, Co-director of the Center for Economic Policy Research, commented on growth and governance as related to financial abuses. Branco Milanovic, Lead Economist for the Bank, commented on the pursuit of corruption cases and lessons to be learned. The audience asked questions of the panelists regarding government secrecy, exchange laws, and the slowdown in Latin America due to money laundering.


Comments

Login to Post a Comment.


Contributors to this Page