Saturday, April 07, 2012

The most enterprising land


This is my second postette.
I read in the article titled They sell sea shells [not on the sea shore but offshore], The Economist of April 4, 2012, the following:
The British Virgin Islands (BVI) alone registered 59,000 new firms in 2010. It had 457,000 active companies as of last September—more than 16 companies for every one of its 28,000 people.
If only India developed such entrepreneurship!
The article puts a tremendous positive spin on this entrepreneurship of the people of BVI – the companies so established, even if they are merely “paper firms”, help during mergers, help park assets during complicated transactions, and most ironically, help fend off lawsuits. Lawsuits by whom? The article is so helpful to the islanders: “…countries with predatory governments or corrupt courts.”
The negatives, though elided over, caught my attention. The paper companies “can also be [my emphasis; note how what is actual has been transformed into a potential] misused-for tax evasion, money laundering, sanctions busting or terrorism.” The truth, as per Robert Palmer of Global Witness, a campaigning group, is, “’It’s [the shell company] a basic launderer’s tool’.” Band Box, please take note.
Now, what is British Virgin Islands? It is a British overseas territory, nominally independent that falls under the jurisdiction of the United Kingdom. It is typically through tourism and financial services (of the laundering type, one may note) that the putative country has become one of the wealthiest in that region.
So, on what moral basis can the United Kingdom position itself as the moral arbiter for the world, wielding the big cane of corruption? The same must apply to all the other so-called corruption-free countries and societies. After all, all of them came in to being exclusively on economic rationale, expanding entrepreneurship, scale benefits. All things like culture, religion, language are all merely add-ons.
Let us bark up the right tree on corruption.
Raghuram Ekambaram

6 comments:

Tomichan Matheikal said...

Scratch morality and savagery bleeds out!

Yeah, religion, culture, etc are add-ons meant to hide the savagery.

mandakolathur said...

And that savagery is economic savagery Matheikal; what else would you call evicting people from the forest that had been their homestead for eons, all in the name of progress and economic growth through exploitation? No, I am not against mining ores, but temper your profit seeking in the interest of expanding your humanity. After all, people of the forest too are PEOPLE, first and foremost.

RE

dsampath said...

there are many such places which
offer such facilities.. whatever be their moral or immoral logic..

mandakolathur said...

DS Sir,

If you have the time, please read through the referred article and you will be in for much surprise. Just ask why the state of Delaware is the preferred state for incorporation, just the same as Panama for shipping flag! So, Delaware is as bad as the basket case that is Panama!

RE

Amrit Yegnanarayan said...

UK never cared from where they got their money - in the past (opium) or the present (money dhobi)

mandakolathur said...

But Amrit,you left out the time between opium and cocaine (what and how they got from India)!

What you say is true of other colonizers too, as much if not more than the UK.

Thanks.

RE