International Journal on Criminology Volume 2, Number 1, Spring 2014 | Page 9

The Long Arm of Crime and Financial Crisis World Bank to save it from the damaging effects of the "shock therapy" was diverted and placed outside Russia. "The Tequila Crisis" 1994 The 1994–1995 Mexican financial crisis, known as the "Tequila Effect" was, more than anything, a "cocaine effect". Mexican traffickers acquired a very large share in the revenues from Colombian drugs exported to the United States at the beginning of the 1990s, earning themselves more than US$10 billion per year. The business privatizations under the Salinas presidency (1988–1994) provided an opportunity for "recycling" the profits from narcotics through a banking sector that had itself been privatized. Following the 1994–1995 crisis, the banks owed more than US$180 billion for which the State Treasury was forced to assume liability. Combined with an influx of international capital, this money laundering contributed to a massive injection of enormous sums of cash into the economy and the creation of a double real estate and stock market "bubble". Although they represented only 1% to 3% of Mexican GDP in the beginning, both in trade and in banking, the narcotics dollars distorted markets in favor of Mafia networks. The "money laundering premium" earned by the drugs barons made them more competitive and able to "absorb" their competitors and yet still focus on short-term speculative investments. Access to credit enabled them to recycle dirty capital and to increase the power of its impact. The injection of narcotics dollars weakened trade and precipitated payment defaults, causing the Peso to be devalued and bringing on the financial crisis. It cost the Mexican Treasury more than US$100 billion and increased unemployment threefold. “The Thai Bubble” The 1997 Asian Crisis started in Thailand, where the scenario was a similar one. The equivalent of 10% of Thai GDP was controlled by organized crime networks which earned their income for the most part from illegal gaming, prostitution, and trafficking in drugs exported from Burma. As in Mexico, the influx of short-term foreign capital accelerated a speculative trend. The deterioration in external accounts made worse by the increase in the value of the US dollar and shrinkage of expert opportunities precipitated the devaluation of the Baht. However, the local political and financial system also played a role by massively encouraging the laundering of illegal and Mafia earnings. At the end of 1999, despite a 10% fall in Thai GDP in 1998 and real estate overcapacity in Bangkok estimated at more than three hundred thousand units, sales prices held their ground. The reason for this stability, impossible to comprehend in market terms, becomes clear if we consider the money laundering circuit impact. 4 On this crisis see a number of articles by Jean-François Gayraud: "La Dimension Criminelle de la Crise des Subprimes (The Criminal Dimension of the Subprime Crisis), Diplomatie, Special Edition No. 8, April–May 2009; "Crises Financières: la Dimension Criminelle Un An Après" (Financial Crises, the Criminal Dimension One year On), Défense Nationale et Sécurité Collective, December 2009; "Capitalisme Criminel: Subprimes ou Subcrimes?" (Criminal Capitalism: Subprime or Subcrime?), Cité, No. 41, PUF, March 2010. 5 See Noël Pons, "La Crise des Subprimes: une Aubaine pour les Criminalités?" (Subprime Crisis: A Bonanza for Criminals), Cahiers de la Sécurité, No. 7, January–March 2009. 7