Chancellor will use
the G7 and IMF meetings in
Washington this week to call on the international community to
tighten the screws on dirty money that is used to fund rogue
regimes and illicit activity, through more effective sanctions on
North Korea and greater IMF scrutiny.
International sanctions are an effective defence against illegal
behaviour, but criminals and regimes can adapt. The international
community must now refine its approach to tackling corruption,
which costs the global economy $2.6 trillion.
The Chancellor is today (20 April 2018) announcing three steps at
the IMFSpring Meetings. These
measures include securing G7 agreement on denying North Korean
access to finance, a call on the IMF to target global
corruption and an increase in funding for the Treasury’s
sanctions team.
The Chancellor of the Exchequer, said:
We must tighten the financial screws on rogue regimes and
corruption.
My priority is to secure international agreement on how to
tackle dirty money. We must shine a light into the darkest
corners of global finance, crack down on corrupt cash and
ensure that as terrorists and criminals become ever more
sophisticated, the international community stays one step
ahead.
UK secures G7 agreement on North Korean
sanctions
The UK provided strong support this week for a G7 finance ministers agreement that
calls for:
-
a crack down on North Korean illicit finance which aims to
stop access to the international financial system via a back
door of bogus companies and artificial ownership structures.
Failure to spot and stop this means money for weapons of mass
destruction
-
all countries must now push their banks and insurance
companies to do more to prevent this dangerous fraud by
ensuring that they are alert to new and more advanced methods
of deception
-
the UK is already a world leader in this area, engaging with
firms about new risks through the Office of Financial
Sanctions Implementation and the Joint Money Laundering
Intelligence Taskforce
The G7 agreement is
set out here. Examples of the
above type of fraud are in Section 5 of this UN report.
Chancellor calls on the IMF to target
international corruption
The Chancellor has called on the IMF to harness their
global expertise and use their Article IV assessment to target
corruption. The IMF Article IV
assessment process is an invaluable tool that speeds up economic
reform. Since 2016 the UK has been calling for
the IMF to harness its
power and insight to tackle corruption. Recent international
events have reinforced this message and underlined that the
global community needs to use all available avenues to stamp out
corruption for both criminal and economic reasons. The Chancellor
today announced that the UK would be one of the first to
volunteer for this new level of scrutiny.
Increasing the Treasury’s sanctions team
We are increasing the size of the Treasury’s sanctions
unit by almost 20% to nearly 40 people. The Office for Financial
Sanctions Implementation (OFSI)detects
and investigates breaches of sanctions, bringing financial crime
and law enforcement experts into the heart of the Treasury.
Advice from OFSI for
businesses about how to manage risk over North Korean sanctions
can be found here.