Whatever the outcome, Pakistan will be joining countries like the United States and Britain in clamping down on rich people who haven’t reported offshore funds. Under one proposal the government will aim to enforce the rarely used anti-corruption rule that offers informers 20 per cent of the looted wealth recovered through information provided by them.
Islamabad will have to effectively block all routes through which money laundering is carried out and uncover as well as throttle known and concealed sources of black money generation. It needs to finalise agreements with Swiss and other country’s banks where Pakistani nationals may have transferred their assets. Such pacts will grant the government access to essential details of financial assets — of Pakistanis stashing their money in secret accounts.
It is easier for a government to lay its hands on black money within the country than that stashed abroad. Probing money moved abroad is just a convenient way of deflecting attention from addressing the larger issue of unaccounted money within the country. The issue of recovering black money will probably take months and years to resolve. A word of caution: even the best laid out plans fail when there is a lack of implementation.
Published in The Express Tribune, September 15th, 2018.
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