This article is about the term for systematic corruption and thievery by the state or state-sanctioned corruption. For a state with ties to or aid from organized crime syndicates, see
Mafia state.
Kleptocracy (from
Greekκλέπτηςkléptēs, "thief", or κλέπτωkléptō, "I steal", and -κρατία-kratía from κράτοςkrátos, "power, rule"), also referred to as thievocracy,[1][2] is a
government whose
corrupt leaders (kleptocrats) use
political power to expropriate the wealth of the people and land they govern, typically by
embezzling or
misappropriating government funds at the expense of the wider population.[3][4] One feature of political-based socioeconomic thievery is that there is often no public announcement explaining or apologizing for misappropriations, nor any legal charges or punishment levied against the offenders.[5]
Kleptocracy is different from
plutocracy (rule by the richest) and
oligarchy (rule by a small elite). In a kleptocracy, corrupt politicians enrich themselves secretly outside the
rule of law, through
kickbacks,
bribes, and special favors from lobbyists and corporations, or they simply direct state funds to themselves
and their associates. Also, kleptocrats often export much of their profits to foreign nations in anticipation of losing power.[6]
According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the first use in English occurs in the publication Indicator of 1819: "Titular ornaments, common to Spanish kleptocracy."[7][citation needed]
Characteristics
Kleptocracies are generally associated with
dictatorships,
oligarchies,
military juntas, or other forms of
autocratic and
nepotist governments in which external oversight is impossible or does not exist. They can also be found in
liberal democracies with
crony capitalism. This lack of oversight can be caused or exacerbated by the ability of the kleptocratic officials to control both the supply of public funds and the means of disbursal for those funds.
Kleptocratic rulers often treat their country's
treasury as a source of personal wealth, spending funds on
luxury goods and extravagances as they see fit. Many kleptocratic rulers secretly transfer public funds into hidden personal
numbered bank accounts in foreign countries to provide for themselves if removed from power.[6][2]
Kleptocracy is most common in developing countries and
collapsing nations whose economies are reliant on the trade of
natural resources. Developing nations' reliance on export incomes constitute a form of
economic rent and are easier to siphon off without causing the income to decrease. This leads to wealth accumulation for the elites and corruption may serve a beneficial purpose by generating more wealth for the state.
In a collapsing nation, reliance on imports from foreign countries becomes likely as the nation's internal resources become exhausted, thereby contractually obligating themselves to trading partners. This leads to kleptocracy as the elites make deals with foreign adversaries to keep the status quo for as long as possible.
To some observers, a thievery society allows the politically connected to redirect wealth to those deemed worthier by state
apparatchiks. According to some pundits, one reason governmental bodies subscribe to theft-prone policies is to lay the groundwork for the socialization of labor and property in an effort to permit thievocrats to make the populace "subservient to an institutionalized authority."[8] Newspaper columnist
Paul Greenberg, in writing against the idea of the United States sending large amounts of foreign aid to
Poland in 1989, argued that Poland was emerging from "40 years of a Communist thievocracy that has obliterated not only economic progress but also the idea of a modern economy."[9]
A specific case of kleptocracy is Raubwirtschaft, German for "plunder economy" or "rapine economy", where the whole economy of the state is based on robbery, looting and plundering the conquered territories. Such states are either in continuous warfare with their neighbours or they simply milk their subjects as long as they have any taxable assets.
Arnold Toynbee has claimed the
Roman Empire was a Raubwirtschaft.[10]
Financial system
Contemporary studies have identified 21st century kleptocracy as a global
financial system based on
money laundering, which "depends on the services of the world's largest banks and expert financial professionals".[11] The
International Monetary Fund has suggested it could be a consensus of estimates, that money laundering made up 2–5 percent of the global economy in 1998.[12][13][14] Kleptocrats engage in
money laundering to obscure the corrupt origins of their wealth and safeguard it from domestic threats such as economic instability and predatory kleptocratic rivals. They are then able to secure this wealth in assets and investments within more stable
jurisdictions, where it can then be stored for personal use, returned to the country of origin to support the kleptocrat's domestic activities, or deployed elsewhere to protect and project the regime's interests overseas.[15]
Kleptocrats abuse the freedoms found in Western countries by transferring funds out of a kleptocracy and into
Western jurisdictions for money laundering and asset security. Since 2011, more than $1 trillion has left
developing countries annually in illicit financial outflows. A 2016 study found that $12 trillion had been siphoned out of the kleptocracies of
Russia,
China, and developing economies.[16] Western
professional services providers are taken advantage of by kleptocratic Russians and Chinese, exploiting legal and financial loopholes in the West to facilitate transnational money laundering.[17][18] The kleptocratic financial system typically comprises four steps according to one opinion.[19]
First, kleptocrats or those operating on their behalf create
anonymous shell companies to conceal the origins and ownership of the funds. Multiple interlocking networks of anonymous shell companies may be created and
nominee directors appointed to further conceal the kleptocrat as the ultimate
beneficial owner of the funds.[20]
Second, kleptocrats violate Western laws when they illegally transfer funds into the Western financial system.
Third, financial transactions conducted by the kleptocrat in a Western country complete the integration of the funds. Once a kleptocrat has purchased an asset this can then be resold, providing a defensible albeit illegal origin of the funds. This is known as money laundering and is illegal throughout the Western world. Research has shown the purchase of
luxury real estate to be a particularly favored method, especially by Chinese and Russian kleptocrats.[21][22]
Fourth, according to a British tabloid, kleptocrats may use their illegally laundered funds to engage in reputation laundering, hiring
public relations firms to present a positive public image and
lawyers to suppress journalistic scrutiny of their political connections and origins of their wealth.[23][24]
In a 2011 forensic study of grand corruption cases, the
World Bank found the United States was the leading victim of illegal incorporation of entities involved in money laundering schemes.[25] The
Department of Treasury estimates that $300 billion is laundered annually in the United States in violation of US law.[26]
This kleptocratic financial system flourishes in the
United States by illegally abusing the United States' liberal economic structure for two reasons.
First, the United States does not have a beneficial ownership registry, and kleptocrats take advantage of this privacy benefit.[27]
Second, kleptocrats take advantage of incorporation agents, lawyers, and realtors to unknowingly launder their money.
Currently[when?], there are only around 1,200 money laundering convictions per year in the United States and money launderers face a less than five percent chance of conviction.[30]Raymond Baker estimates that law enforcement fails in 99.9% of cases to detect money laundering by kleptocrats and other financial criminals.[31]
Other forms of a thievery society that can induce a "culture of systematic fraud" has been described as "political and corporate kleptomania."[36] In this case the plunder and looting enriches not only high government officials, but a narrow class of
plutocrats, who usually represent wealthy individuals and families who have amassed great assets through the usage of political favoritism, special interest legislation, monopolies, special tax breaks, state intervention, subsidies or outright graft. This type of economic system of political spoils is sometimes referred to as
crony capitalism.[37][38]
Effects
The effects of a kleptocratic regime or government on a nation are typically adverse in regards to the welfare of the state's
economy, political affairs, and
civil rights. Kleptocratic governance typically ruins prospects of foreign investment and drastically weakens the domestic market and cross-border trade. As kleptocracies often embezzle money from their citizens by misusing funds derived from
tax payments, or engage heavily in money laundering schemes, they tend to heavily degrade quality of life for citizens.[39]
In addition, the money that kleptocrats steal is diverted from funds earmarked for public amenities such as the building of hospitals, schools, roads, parks – having further adverse effects on the quality of life of citizens.[40] The informal oligarchy that results from a kleptocratic elite subverts democracy (or any other political format).[41]
Examples
In early 2004, the German anti-corruption
NGOTransparency International released a list of ten self-enriching leaders in the two decades previous to the report. Transparency International acknowledged that they were "not necessarily the 10 most corrupt leaders" and noting that "very little is known about the amounts actually embezzled".[42]
In descending order of amount allegedly stolen (converted to
United States dollars), they were:
Azerbaijan has been described as a kleptocracy for its use of oil-revenue to enrich an oligarch class, including that of the ruling Aliyev dynasty.[47][48]
^L.K. Samuels, Killing History: The False Left-Right Political Spectrum, Freeland Press, 2019, p. 484
^Paul Greenberg "Invasion: Here Come the Debtors," Congressional Record: Extensions of Remarks, Nov. 12, 1989, p. 31757, and from the Washington Times, Nov. 20, 1989
^Sharman, J. C. (2017). The Despot's Guide to Wealth Management: On the International Campaign against Grand Corruption. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. p. 1.
ISBN9781501705519.
^"The Puppet Masters". Stolen Asset Recovery Initiative, The World Bank. October 24, 2011. Archived from
the original on November 21, 2018. Retrieved July 19, 2018.
^Wazir Johan Karim (2020), The Global Nexus: Political Economies, Connectivity, and the Social Sciences, London and Hackensack, NJ, World Scientific Publishing, pp. 170–171< [ISBN missing]
^"Crude Intentions: How Oil Corruption Contaminates the World". Oxford Academic. p. 132. Retrieved January 23, 2024. During the price boom, Azerbaijan's annual oil revenues rose from $5.5 billion in 2007 to $23 billion in 2011. Fueled by these riches, Aliyev used government contracts, loans, and other channels to enrich his allies and build a robust and pervasive kleptocracy. These money flows did relatively little to develop the country's nonoil economy, and after the boom the country faced a major recession as a result.Years before his sons began shopping for jets, Heydarov worked as the head of Azerbaijan's customs agency, where—according to US diplomats— he built his influence and benefited President Aliyev through such means as creating import monopolies for certain products and allocating them to business people loyal to the regime.
^Rankin, Jennifer (February 1, 2017).
"Council of Europe urged to investigate Azerbaijan bribery allegations". The Guardian.
ISSN0261-3077. Retrieved January 24, 2024. The parliamentary assembly of the Council of Europe (Pace) has been accused of turning a blind eye to corruption, after allegations that a former senior member was paid €2.39m (£2.06m) to engineer votes to protect the kleptocratic regime of Azerbaijan's president, Ilham Aliyev.