| Throughout
his career, Raymond Bakera tough-as-nails businessman
turned scholarhas been thoroughly committed to capitalism.
He has seen it all, and now he offers careful analysis and
gripping examples illustrating the serious problems besetting
the global free-market system. With this book, Baker provides
a fascinating insider’s look at the way criminals,
terrorists, and businesspeople move dirty money around the
world, impoverishing billions and corrupting capitalism’s
ideals of fair play. In a highly readable account, he links
banking, commerce, law, economics, and philosophy with passionate
advocacy of steps that must be taken to renew capitalism’s
mandate for the spread of global prosperity.
For over forty years in more than sixty countries, Raymond
Baker has witnessed the free-market system operating illicitly
and corruptly, with devastating consequences for scores
of fragile nations. Now, in Capitalism’s Achilles
Heel, Bakerthe internationally respected authority
on money laundering, corruption, and development issuestakes
you on a fascinating journey that winds its way across the
global free-market system and reveals how dirty money, poverty,
and inequality are inextricably intertwined.
You’ll discover how little illicit transactions lead
to massive illegalities used by drug kingpins, racketeers,
terrorist masterminds, and multinational corporations. You’ll
learn how staggering global income disparities are worsened
by the illegalities that have come to permeate international
capitalism. And you’ll see how distorted philosophical
underpinnings appear to justify flaws in the practice of
capitalism.
Drawing on his experiences throughout Africa, Asia, Latin
America and Europe, Baker shows how western banks and businesses
use secret transactions and ignore laws while handling some
$1 trillion in illicit proceeds each year. He also illustrates
how businesspeople, criminals, and kleptocrats perfect the
same techniques to shift fundsthrough transfer pricing,
false documentation, fake corporations, tax havens, secrecy
jurisdictions, and other tricks of the tradeand how
these tactics negatively affect individuals, institutions,
and countries.
Can anything be done? For capitalism to succeed on a global
scale, we must fight rampant lawlessness, reduce inequality,
and recast the free market’s supporting structures
around principles of global justice. Capitalism’s
Achilles Heel provides a place for us to start. |