Home > Estimating illicit financial flows resulting from drug trafficking and other transnational organized crimes. Research report.

UNODC Studies and Threat Analysis Section (STAS), Division for Policy Analysis and Public. (2011) Estimating illicit financial flows resulting from drug trafficking and other transnational organized crimes. Research report. Vienna: United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.

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Criminals, especially drug traffickers, may have laundered around $1.6 trillion, or 2.7 per cent of global GDP, in 2009, according to a new report by UNODC. This figure is consistent with the 2 to 5 per cent range previously established by the International Monetary Fund to estimate the scale of money-laundering.

Less than 1 per cent of global illicit financial flows is currently being seized and frozen, according to the report Estimating illicit financial flows resulting from drug trafficking and other transnational organized crime. "Tracking the flows of illicit funds generated by drug trafficking and organized crime and analysing how they are laundered through the world's financial systems remain daunting tasks," acknowledged Yury Fedotov, Executive Director of UNODC.

The UNODC report estimates that the total amount of criminal proceeds generated in 2009, excluding those derived from tax evasion, may have been approximately $2.1 trillion, or 3.6 per cent of GDP in that year (2.3 to 5.5 per cent). Of that total, the proceeds of transnational organized crime - such as drug trafficking, counterfeiting, human trafficking and small arms smuggling - may have amounted to 1.5 per cent of global GDP, and 70 per cent of those proceeds are likely to have been laundered through the financial system.

The illicit drug trade - accounting for half of all proceeds of transnational organized crime and a fifth of all crime proceeds - is the most profitable sector. The study paid particular attention to the market for cocaine, probably the most lucrative illicit drug trafficked across borders. Traffickers' gross profits from the cocaine trade stood at around $84 billion in 2009. While Andean coca bush farmers earned about $1 billion, the bulk of the income generated from cocaine was concentrated in North America ($35 billion), followed by West and Central Europe ($26 billion). Approximately two-thirds of that total may have been laundered in 2009. The findings suggest that most profits from the cocaine trade are laundered in North America and in Europe, whereas illicit income from other subregions is probably laundered in the Caribbean.

Once illegal money has entered the global and financial markets, it becomes much harder to trace its origins, and the laundering of ill-gotten gains may perpetuate a cycle of crime and drug trafficking. "UNODC's challenge is to work within the United Nations system and with Member States to help to build the capacity to track and prevent money-laundering, strengthen the rule of law and prevent these funds from creating further suffering," said Mr. Fedotov.


Item Type
Report
Publication Type
International, Report
Drug Type
Substances (not alcohol/tobacco)
Intervention Type
Crime prevention
Date
2011
Pages
140 p.
Publisher
United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime
Corporate Creators
UNODC Studies and Threat Analysis Section (STAS), Division for Policy Analysis and Public
Place of Publication
Vienna
EndNote
Accession Number
HRB (Electronic Only)
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