Tackling illicit capital flows begins with the recognition that it is against national interest ECA panel
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2011-05Author(s)/Corporate Author (s)
United Nations. Economic Commission for Africa.;Metadata
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Problems of illicit capital flows, capital flight, money laundering, porous tax systems and direct corruption would need to be urgently and adequately addressed for domestic resources to play their full role in the economic transformation in Africa; participants in the Forum on Financing for Development, which opened in Addis Ababa yesterday, were again reminded today. In a breakout session on “Tackling illicit capital flows for economic transformation” panelists arrived at the conclusion that all the stakeholders in Africa’s development know the problem, and that the time had come for governments and development partners to take collective action against the cankerworm, according to the Information and Communications Service of ECA.
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“United Nations. Economic Commission for Africa. (2011-05). Tackling illicit capital flows begins with the recognition that it is against national interest ECA panel. Addis Ababa:. © UN. ECA,. https://hdl.handle.net/10855/33294”Collections
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