To Break Barriers, Give Women More Access To Climate Finance

Women displaced by heavy flooding in 2010 queue to fetch water inTo Break Barriers, Give Women More Access To Climate Finance
Pakistan. Women are among the most affected during climate-related
disasters.

When climate-related disasters strike, everyone is affected but
when it comes to health and household management, women
tend to suffer more than men.
Despite this, women and gender issues are yet to be included completely in large-scale climate finance facilities — mechanisms instituted to mitigate disaster effects and spur climate adaptability in development work — due to several challenges, including lack of information and accessibility.

For climate finance mechanisms to become truly sustainable, impactful and comprehensive, putting women at the center of climate action by breaking barriers on accessibility is vital, experts agreed in a recent online conversation hosted by the Asian Development Bank.

“Only when women are recognized as important contributors to address climate change — change agents — and actively sought out as relevant stakeholders are climate funds structures changing to allow more women to benefit from climate finance,” said Liane Schalatek, associate director of U.S.-based group Heinrich Böll Foundation.
To break barriers, give women more access to climate finance

arendvandam.com

arendvandam.com

Ben Ali Family’s Corrupt Grasp On Tunisian Economy

Our correspondent Andreas Frank reports; In Arabic it is called “wasta”, the connections and influence that grease the wheels of the bureaucracy and helps you get ahead. And the family of Zein al-Abidine Ben Ali, deposed president of Tunisia, had plenty of it.

A World Bank report confirmed that the Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali regime, ousted in Tunisia’s bent the rules to their own benefit – cashing in on the country in the process.

Government regulations on businesses, normally used to protect domestic industry from foreign competition or consumers and workers from corporate abuse, were often times instead used in Tunisia to further the private interests of the Ben Ali family, the authors Antonio Nucifora, Caroline Freund, and Bob Rijkers said.

The report underlines the depth of the challenges facing Tunisia today three years after Mr Ben Ali’s regime was overthrown, with many of the same rules of business still on the country’s books.

World Bank researchers analysed previously private tax data provided by Tunisia’s Ministry of Finance and relating to more than 600,000 firms. They found that 220 companies owned by Mr Ben Ali relatives earned 21 per cent of all the country’s private-sector profits between 1996 and 2010, in large part benefiting from rules in their favour.

The Ben Ali family appeared to know which sectors of the market to enter, staying away from businesses where there was too much competition. Moreover, sectors that piqued the interest of Mr Ben Ali’s family members tended to draw more regulatory activity, the report showed.

“It is easier to make money when there are regulations protecting you from competition and even more so when you can create new regulations as needed,” said Caroline Freund, a co-author of the report from the Peterson Institute for International Economics.

Mr Ben Ali’s clan included Sakher el-Materi, who is married to the president’s eldest daughter, Nesrine. In 2004 he bought Enakl, a state-owned car dealership, for about $16m. Soon after the government quadrupled Enakl’s import quota. Mr el-Materi floated 40 per cent of the company in 2009 and netted 53m Tunisian dinars ($33m).

He and his wife had by 2010 amassed ownership or stakes in a total of 36 businesses, including a lucrative shipping operation in the Tunis suburb of La Goulette which he set up after being granted a coveted permit to do so. In addition, he was elected to parliament as a member of his father-in-law’s party.

Companies linked to Mr Ben Ali’s circle on average controlled 6.3 per cent more market share than ordinary businesses, a differential “entirely due to Ben Ali firms sorting into [tending towards] the regulated sectors”, the report stated.

“There is nothing illegal happening here,” stressed Bob Rijkers, a World Bank economist who co-authored the report. “It is just that these laws do not necessarily benefit the public.

Over the years of Ben Ali’s rule, he issued 22 presidential decrees resulting in 73 amendments to the business code. Sometimes they were almost comically shaped to confirm the Ben Ali family’s various business interests. A 2007 rule requiring government authorisation for firms producing cement came as Mr Ben Ali’s brother-in-law established a new company called Carthage Cement.

At the time US diplomats noted in dispatches to Washington accusations that Mr Ben Ali’s circle were able to win advantages and crowd out competitors. Ordinary Tunisians also grumbled suspiciously at Mr Materi’s good fortune.

This concentration of wealth in just a few hands also fuelled broad discontent that would ultimately explode into revolution and the Arab Spring. Mr Ben Ali and Mr el-Materi were forced into exile in 2011.

“We tend to think of corruption more directly as bribes,” said Ms Freund. “But what people were upset about [in Tunisia] was this kind of crony-capitalism that characterises the whole region, and other countries as well”.

Well-connected cliques such as those close to Mr Ben Ali did help drive national growth rates of 4-5 per cent before the Arab Spring, impressing outside observers. Mr Ben Ali earned international praise for his handling of the economy by removing much of the regulations on export-oriented businesses.

“By opening up parts of the economy and giving the red-carpet treatment to foreign investors, he gave an impression of a country that was very open to business and investors,” said Antonio Nucifora, lead economist in the Middle East and North Africa region at the World Bank. “What this did was take away the spotlight from most of the economy which remained protected by barriers to entry, price control regulations.”

Unlike Egypt, Libya or Syria, Tunisia managed to squeeze its way out of a political crisis and avoid a descent into chaotic violence or political repression. Tunisia has since then drawn up a consensus constitution that has not only been lauded by the international community but has calmed political nerves after two assassinations last year nearly derailed the country’s transition.

But Mr Nucifora and his team said Tunisia has yet to unravel the regulatory structure at the heart of the Ben Ali era’s dysfunctional economy, and that business rules and restrictions stifling competition remain in place.

“It would be a mistake to assume that following the departure of Ben Ali and his family the cronyism [has] disappeared in Tunisia,” Mr Nucifora said.

Mr Ben Ali, now in exile in Saudi Arabia, has been convicted in absentia and sentenced to life in prison on charges of corruption, theft and complicity in murder.
World Bank Press Release
All in the Family – State Capture in Tunisia
Related reports

A cartoon displayed in Tunis last year depicts Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali fleeing with stolen dollars as a bird sings ‘bring back the people’s money’. Photograph: Eileen Byrne

How Money is Saved, Spent And Invested Worldwide

IMF’s Lagarde: Women In Workforce Key To Healthy Economies

As the first woman to lead the International Monetary Fund, Christine Lagarde is among an elite group of people determining how money is saved, spent and invested worldwide.

It’s not the first time she’s been a “first.” Lagarde was France’s first female finance minister, and before that, the first woman to chair the global law firm Baker & McKenzie.

As part of NPR’s look at the Changing Lives of Women, Morning Edition’s Renee Montagne spoke with Lagarde about her career, and what the IMF is doing to encourage economic growth by promoting women in the workforce.
Interview Highlights: On the findings of a recent IMF study on women in the workforce
Women In Workforce Key To Healthy Economies

IMF Staff Discussion Note

Inconclusive Fight Against Money Laundering In Norway

Our correspondent Andreas Frank reports; Meanwhile, a report commissioned by the Police Directorate (Politidirektoratet) found Norwegian police and prosecutors focus on petty crimes and drug crimes when investigating money laundering, and do not pay enough attention to economic crime.

Swedish law professor Dan Magnusson analysed all the money laundering and illegal goods handling cases closed under the Oslo police district in 2012. “The results of the survey suggest that the tax authorities, trustees in bankruptcy, the prosecution and the police are unable to identify and investigate money laundering,” Magnusson said. “Neither does the court seem to have an ambition to raise money laundering as a crime that should have a general deterrent effect.”

Norway has comparatively few money laundering cases. Part of Magnusson’s survey was to identify if cases had been wrongly classified, skewing the results. His report showed both illegal handling of goods cases misclassified as money laundering, and vice versa, but was most concerned by the fact most cases related to drug crime, not the economic organized crime the legislation is focusing on.

“We are not satisfied with the conclusions the report reaches about a lack of effort in the area of money laundering,” said Torgeir Magnussen, an inspector with the Police Directorate. “It is remarkable that he did not find money laundering in economic crime in the material he has gone through.”

The report covered a third of the criminal handling and money laundering cases in Norway, but excluded cases investigated by the national economic crime unit Økokrim. Magnussen said the directorate will ask the Police University College (Politihøgskolen) to do a similar investigation at Økokrim.
Politi PressRelease 26.3.14
GOV ML Report 26.3.14

How can women work against corruption ? If you see something, say something !!!

Swiss Decide Against Russian Sanctions

Our correspondent Andreas Frank reports; The Swiss federal government decided not to impose sanctions against Russia for its seizure of Crimea, claiming it wanted to find a “balance” between international law and Switzerland’s interests.

“The position of our country is independent of the UN,” Swiss president Didier Burkhalter told a press conference in Bern, saying Switzerland can only use sanctions when they are based upon “international law and the interests of the Swiss”.

“And in this case the rights and the interests play a role… we need to find a balance,” he added, as well as noting that Russian interests in Switzerland were “very large”.

“The federal council has noted the sanctions imposed by the European Union and the United States,” he added.

Burkhalter said some sanctions imposed by the EU would apply to Switzerland, including a ban on the freedom of movement of some Russian nationals as Switzerland is a member of the Schengen group of European countries, which allow passport-free movement between them.

Despite the decision not to impose sanctions, Burkhalter, who is also the country’s foreign minister, said Switzerland would not allow itself to be used by those trying to get round the restrictions already imposed on Russia by the West.

“We do not want to circumvent the sanctions,” said Burkhalter.

He also condemned the Russian annexation of Crimea, saying there was no violation of human rights to justify Moscow’s actions.

Since the beginning of the Ukrainian crisis, Switzerland has tried to tread a fine line between the various parties and in February ordered a freeze on assets held in the country by ousted president Viktor Yanukovych and his son, Oleksandr.

Earlier this month it announced it was looking into suspicions of money-laundering by the former president.

Switzerland has also frozen talks on a trade deal with Moscow and temporarily abandoned a training programme with the Russian military.

However, this year marks the 200th anniversary of relations between Switzerland and Russia and as part of the celebrations Burkhalter is supposed to visit Russia.

No date has yet been fixed.

The majority of Russian gas and petrol is traded in Geneva, and Switzerland is an increasingly popular destination for Russia’s wealthy.

In a March 27, 2013 report from the Swiss Federal Council it is estimated that around 500 companies and some 10,000 employees are active in the commodities sector, which, in addition to trading, also comprises shipping, transaction financing, inspections services and product testing. In 2011 the commodities industry made net receipts from merchanting of 20 billion francs, around 3.5 per cent of Switzerland’s GDP. Switzerland is one of the most important commodity trading centres in the world.
CH_Federal_Council_PressRelease_26.3.14
Swiss Report On Commodities Names Problems But Fails To  Provide Solutions

As the Swiss say: “s Fuenferli und s Weggli ha!”
Get the coins and get the bread».

Get the coins and get the bread

Campaign Finance Reform Benefits Women

New York state is on the cusp of making history — and that’s a good thing for women.

Earlier this year, Gov. Andrew Cuomo included a proposal for the public financing of state elections in his budget. The plan creates a system where public funds match citizens’ small campaign contributions to reduce the influence of big money in politics.

The alarming lack of women lawmakers and leaders has resulted in Legislatures that too often stand in the way of real reform. We have it within our power to remedy this by electing more women, but to do so we must first change the way elections are financed. As the Center for Women in Politics reminds us, “Beyond achieving fundamental fairness and democratic ideals, having women in office makes a difference.”…
Campaign finance reform benefits women

Campaign Finance Reform Benefits Women

What Do Women Want?

Financial advisors who get it

When it comes to women and money, there is good news and there is bad.
In the plus column, women are heading more households and making small inroads in the C-suite. Women have also increased their presence on the Forbes list of billionaires.
In addition, research by Boston College’s Center on Wealth and Philanthropy found that because women tend to outlive their spouses, overall they will be managing the majority of the $41 trillion in wealth that will pass to the next generation by 2052.
But when it comes to financial advice, women are not getting the service they want or need. A study by Fidelity Investments found that when couples interact with a financial advisor, men are 58 percent more likely than women to be the primary contact. And while most women say they do not intend to leave their financial advisor if their husband dies, within a year of being widowed as many as 70 percent actually do, according to one study.
Financial advisors who get it

Rick Tomalty www.ricktomalty.com/herman-needs-a-new-financial-advisor @RickTomalty

Australia Too Soft On Corporate Crimes

Our correspondent Andreas Frank reports; The Australian Securities & Investments Commission released a 79-page report on “penalties for corporate wrongdoing” that examined penalties in Australia and compared them with those in the US, Britain, Hong Kong and Canada.

ASIC said the white paper would form a significant part of a submission to the government regarding financial wrongdoing penalties, which chairman Greg Medcraft has raised with the government repeatedly in recent months.

A key concern of Mr Medcraft, echoed by the report, is that penalties are often not as large as the proceeds of financial wrongdoing, meaning crooks have an incentive to do the wrong thing.

“The maximum fine that may be imposed may be substantially lower than the financial benefit obtained as a result of the wrongdoing,” the report said.
The maximum civil penalty for individuals involved in financial wrongdoing — including all of insider trading, market manipulation, disclosure and inappropriate advice — was just $200,000.

By contrast, the maximum in Canada was $1.05 million, unlimited in Britain, three times the benefit gained in the US, and the greater of $1.4m or three times the benefit gained in Hong Kong.

The $200,000 maximum had not changed since 1992 when they were enacted under the Corporations Act as they were not adjusted for inflation.

In Australia there are no non-criminal laws relating to “disgorgement” – or the removal of gains made by a person involved in financial wrongdoing – while each of comparison jurisdictions had such laws.

ASIC said disgorgement orders could offer “significant deterrent value” by reducing the likelihood wrongdoers “can consider penalties to be merely a business cost”.
The corporate regulator also highlighted the discrepancies between the maximum civil penalties that could be delivered by different Australian regulatory and enforcement bodies.

The highest civil penalty ASIC could impose under the ASIC Act on an individual was just $340,000, one-tenth of the $3.4m that could be handed down under the Anti-Money Laundering and Counter-Terrorism Financing Act.

The maximum penalty for a company, group or “body corporate” was $1.7m under the ASIC Act and $17m under anti-terrorism and money-laundering provisions.

Under the Competition and Consumer Act an individual could be fined a civil penalty as high as $500,000 and corporations could be fined the greater of the three: $10m, three times the value of the benefits obtained by the wrongdoing or 10 per cent of the company’s annual turnover.

ASIC also noted there were different penalties for the same wrongdoing under different acts.

“If we pursue an individual for providing unlicensed financial services under the Corporations Act, we could obtain at most a criminal fine of $34,000,” the corporate regulator said.

By contrast, a person pursued under the National Credit Act for engaging in “unlicensed credit activity” could be forced to pay up to $340,000 in fines.
ASIC Report

Corruption

 

Women In Finance Have A Bright Future

LAHORE: Women are sometimes intimidated by the idea of accounting as a career.  Yet the field has a bright future and a huge scope for those who want to take part and lead the corporate sector of Pakistan. The perception of how difficult accounting is for women needs to change now.

This was the crux of a round table discussion of senior female finance experts who looked at ways to enable more women enter the world of finance with the event being organised by the Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (ACCA).  While a great many women have entered the finance profession, they account for only 20% of the most senior posts held in the sector.
“There are proven economic benefits of female participation in the work force, which in turn have a direct impact on gross domestic product (GDP) and other economic indicators. Our research shows that the benefits of having women on board include the belief that women protect business interests, and that they ensure the boards make more balanced decisions,” said Jenny Gu, ACCA Council Member. “Despite these perceptions, there is still much more that needs to be done to ensure boards are more diverse, and discussions such as these will help raise these issues up the agenda.”
Women in Finance Have a Bright Future

Women in finance have a bright future