May 28, 2021 | Research Report
  • Headline: Capital Flight from Africa
  • Intro Text: PERI researchers Léonce Ndikumana and James Boyce present updated estimates of capital flight from 30 African countries over the period 1970-2018. Over this 49-year period, this group of countries lost a combined $2 trillion through capital flight. This far exceeds the $720 billion of external debt owed by these countries as of 2018, making them effectively ‘net creditors’ to the rest of the world. Capital flight persists as a major obstacle to development financing in Africa. The paper calls for urgent action to stem the financial hemorrhage and to devise strategies to repatriate stolen assets stashed offshore.
  • Type of publication: Research Report
  • Research or In The Media: Research
  • Research Area: African Development Policy
  • Publication Date: 2021-05-28
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  • Authors:
    • Add Authors: Léonce Ndikumana
    • Add Authors: James K. Boyce
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Capital Flight from Africa, 1970-2018: New Estimates with Updated Trade Misinvoicing Methodology

Abstract

This report presents updated estimates of capital flight from 30 African countries over the period 1970-2018. Over this 49-year time-frame, this group of countries lost a combined $2 trillion through capital flight. Net misinvoicing of exports and imports contributed $588 billion to total capital flight. It is estimated that the stock of offshore wealth accumulated from capital flight reached $2.4 trillion in 2018, assuming that capital outflows earned the equivalent of the modest US Treasury Bill rate in destination territories. This far exceeds the $720 billion of external debt owed by this group of countries as of 2018. In this sense, these African countries are a ‘net creditor’ to the rest of the world. The evidence suggests that capital flight remains a major obstacle to development financing in Africa, and it calls for urgent action to stem the financial hemorrhage and to devise strategies to repatriate stolen assets stashed offshore.

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