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The economics of terrorism
THE UNPRECEDENTED terrorist attacks by air in New York and
Washington have opened a new phase in the history of mankind and
President Bush has already declared it as the "first war of the
21st century.'' For many in India, it is a grim reminder of the
1993 serial blasts in Mumbai though not comparable on any tragic
scale to what happened in New York and Washington. The real
significance of Black Tuesday (September 11) is that it is almost
sure to shock the U.S. into treating terrorism as its overriding
security concern.
The U.S. might take a vow to wipe off terrorism from this planet
but even a casual look at the economics of such criminal
activities makes it an impossible task. Though most countries
might make a mistake of believing it as a plain or
politically/ideologically motivated criminal activity the actual
truth comes to the surface only when we take a closer look at the
economics. It is certainly not a war between nations, religions
or classes or even civilisations, as Prof. Samuel Huntington
would like us to believe.
It is fundamentally a broad conflict that puts the moderate
against the extremist. The job of fighting terrorism cannot be
separated from the task of preventing, containing and ending
conflicts. All too often the places that generate terrorism as
well as drug-trafficking, health epidemics, refugees, outflows
and environmental disasters are shattered societies where hunger,
greed, repression and poverty have fed violence, despair and
extremism.
A close nexus
"Organised crime" will be a defining issue of the 21st century as
the cold war was that of the 20th century and colonialism that of
the 19th century. Transnational crime will proliferate because
crime groups are the major beneficiaries of globalisation. The
global drug industry alone now accounts for 2 per cent of the
world economy and it is constantly rising.
According to a 1999 World Bank report, the smuggling trade
between Taliban-controlled Afghanistan and Pakistan was worth
more than $2.5 billions in 1997. If smuggling from other
neighbouring nations is included in this network, the turnover
could easily cross $5 billions most of it is in narcotics and its
related ingredients like various chemicals which go for refining
heroin.
There is a close nexus between Taliban and Pakistan in drug-
trafficking. According to the U.N. Drug Control Programme,
Afghanistan produced 4,600 metric tons of opium in 1999
three times more opium than what is produced elsewhere in the
world. This opium is processed in refining factories in Pakistan
before being sent to Lagos en route to Europe and America. It is
this drug money, running into several millions of dollars, that
fuels terrorism, funds networks across the world and makes
possible missions like the WTC air attack.
But drugs may not be the largest part of the global mafia's
business. Mafia related stock-frauds use offshore corporations
through various hideouts in the international system to
manipulate the stock market.
There are around 50 "states" in the world, e.g. Bahamas, the
Pacific island of Nauru, Yugoslavia and the Republic of
Montenegro, that exist largely by selling their national
sovereignty to those who wish to buy it in order to make their
business deals inconspicuous. The "state" of Dominia advertises
itself on the World Wide Web its passport can be bought in
a package with a name change, under the slogan "Perfect for
someone who would like to leave his past behind". There is no
secret as to what these states do; but since they have the formal
attributes of independent states, they cannot simply be closed
down.
Estimates of profits
Internationalisation of criminal activities induces organised
crime in different countries to establish strategic alliances to
cooperate, rather than fight, on each other's turf, through
subcontracting arrangements and joint ventures, whose business
practice closely follows the organisational logic of what Manuel
Castells, of the fame of The Rise of Network Society, has
characterised as "the network enterprise", the characteristic of
the Information Age. Furthermore, the bulk of the proceedings of
these activities are by definition globalised through their
laundering via global financial markets.
Estimates of profits and financial flows originate in the
criminal economy very wildly and are not fully reliable. Yet they
are indicative of the phenomenon. The 1994 United Nations
Conference on Global Organised Crime estimated that global trade
in drugs amounted to about $500 billions a year; that is, it was
larger than the global trade in oil. Overall profits from all
kinds of illegal activities were put as high as US$1 trillion a
year in 1993, which was about the same size as the U.S. federal
budget at that time. Sterling considers plausible the figure of
$500 billions as the likely global turnover of "narco-dollars."
In 1999, the IMF ventured a very broad estimate of global money
laundering in a range between 500 billion and 1.5 trillion
dollars a year (or 5 per cent of global GDP).
Need for new agency
The recent global experience of catastrophic terrorism at World
Trade Center in New York necessitates the formation of a new
institution in India to gather intelligence and deal with all
terrorism-related issues. It may be called a National Terrorism
Intelligence Bureau, which can collect and analyse information so
that it may give a timely warning of suspected catastrophic
terrorist activities much ahead of time. The Bureau could have
access to data of all law-enforcement agencies and it should be
the apex organisation. The Bureau may have following broad
functions:
First, to monitor and timely warn the government bodies
concerned, and law-enforcement agencies regarding terrorist
threats; second, to receive and store all lawfully collected
relevant information from any government agency including law-
enforcement, phone tapping and judicial information; third, to
protect established civil liberty of citizens; fourth, to produce
integrated reports that could be disseminated to any agency
needing them: finally to suggest ways for counter-terrorism
intelligence, including bilateral efforts of individual agency.
In short, the Bureau would combine the active intelligence
gathering approach of the national security agencies, which are
not legally constrained in their foreign investigations, with the
domestic authority and investigative resources of law enforcement
agencies.
Breeding ground
In devising strategies to fight the terrorists and terrorism, it
would surely be useful to minutely observe and understand the
forces that drive them. Poverty (illiteracy) amid plenty is one
of the greatest challenges and the breeding grounds for
terrorism. According to the World Development Report 2000-2001,
"at the start of new century, poverty remains a global problem of
huge proportions. Of the world's 6 billion people, 2.8 billion
live on less than $2 a day, and 1.2 billion on less than $1 a
day. Six infants of every 100 do not see their first birthday,
and 8 do not survive to their fifth. Of those who do reach school
age, 9 boys in 100, and 14 girls, do not go to primary school."
Similarly, technical hegemony is creating a new map of the world.
A small part of the globe, accounting for some 15 per cent of the
earth's population, provides nearly all of the world's technology
innovations. A second part, involving perhaps half of the world's
population, is able to adopt these technologies in production and
consumption. The remaining part, covering around a third of the
world's population, is technologically disconnected, neither
innovating at home nor adopting foreign technologies. Thus, a
concerted attack on poverty and technology diffusion on a large
scale will go a long way to contain terrorism and it will dry up
the ideological base which sustain the terrorists and terrorism.
Lecturing poor countries about weak governance, while providing
precious little money for technological advance, public health
and other needs, is mere rhetoric which will not work.
Quarrels over ideology have ended. The prosperity of the richest
countries is at an all-time high, and so is their capacity to
look beyond their own immediate needs. At the same time, the
crisis of the poorest countries is acute, and the shortcomings of
the current strategy of globalisation painfully evident. Much of
the poorer world is in turmoil, caught in a vicious circle of
disease, poverty and political instability. Large-scale financial
and scientific help from the rich nations is an investment worth-
making, not only for humanitarian reasons, but also because even
remote countries in turmoil become outposts of disorder for the
rest of the world, as has been happening in Afghanistan, Pakistan
and Sudan.
During the cold war, the U.S. and its allies invested trillions
of dollars to stop the spread of communism. Now, a similar amount
should be spent for wiping out terrorism from the globe and the
generous aid could facilitate the poor, backward countries in
integrating into a global economic network.
Needless to say that at present America's foreign aid is just 0.1
per cent of its GDP, a derisory shadow of what it used to be. In
1969 the Pearson Commission recommended that donor countries give
0.7 per cent of their gross national product in official
development assistance (ODA). The total gap in international
development cooperation is close to $100 billions a year,
precisely the amount that would be available if the appropriate
ODA, according to the 0.7 per cent target, were met. The
challenge is to persuade the industrial countries that aid
expenditure to build a more secure world is a vital investment
and certainly more efficacious than military expenditures.
Following America's lead, most of the large and developed
economies have allowed their own foreign-assistance programmes to
shrink since the end of the cold war. Even when the United States
reaped a peace dividend of more than 2 per cent of GDP by
reducing its defence spending after 1990, it cut, rather than
increased, foreign-assistance spending as a share of its national
income. The need of the hour is that American administration
should pledge to raise foreign assistance to at least 0.3 per
cent of the GDP. This would not only bring the world's richest
country back in line with the average aid proportion of other
donor nations, but would make available an extra $20 billions a
year to invest in economic development. Such a turnaround in
America's role could harness much larger contributions from the
European Union, Japan, and other potential donors (both public
and private). This increase in foreign assistance by donors would
have a positive impact in a serious attempt to contain terrorism
as well as break the nexus of illegal economic activities and
terrorism at global scale and will foster social capital, civil
society and development.
DEVENDRA MISHRA
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