Illicit financial flows (IFFs) deprive low-income countries of essential revenues while donors’ willingness to fund aid budgets dwindles. IFFs related to foreign direct investment and trade include transfer mispricing, trade mispricing and profit shifting. Policy options to curb IFFs range from short-term fixes to mid-term measures that adjust legal instruments and improve coordination between countries, to more fundamental structural reforms that require a longer time horizon. Which policies are effective and should be pursued is a highly contested point, slowing down the progress of reform. This is unsurprising as reducing IFFs involves a distributional conflict: more for those deprived of revenues now means less for those who currently benefit. We conduct a Q-methodology study among IFF policy experts. We use Q-methodology to reveal participants’ policy preferences and tease out lines of contestation and areas of agreement to identify the policy space available in which to advanc…
Source: Fritz Brugger
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