Illicit: How Smugglers, Traffickers, and Copycats are Hijacking the Global Economy | 
agrandir | Auteur: Moises Naim Créateur: Moises Naim Éditeur: Doubleday Books
Acheter Neuf: EUR 29,43
Neuf (3) D'occasion (6) de EUR 4,44
Classement parmi les ventes: 113400
Média: Relie Pages: 352 Poids (kg): 1.4 Dimension (cm): 9.5 x 6.5 x 1.1
ISBN: 0385513925 Code Décimal Dewey: 364.135 EAN: 9780385513920 ASIN: 0385513925
Date de publication: Octobre 2005 Disponibilité: Expedition sous 1 a 2 jours ouvres Expédition: Livraison internationale disponible Condition: Expedies des Etats-Unis. Tous les livres sont neuves! Livraison est d'environ 10-14 jours ouvrables.
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Amazon.com Illicit activities are exploding worldwide. The onslaught of globalization has unleashed a tidal wave of bad stuff--everything from arms trafficking, human smuggling, and money laundering to music bootlegging. Here is the dark side of globalization: the mushrooming underground economy. Moises Naim explores this murky world in his book Illicit. Naim is the editor of the relaunched magazine Foreign Policy and a former executive director of the World Bank and Minister of Trade and Industry of Venezuela. In Illicit, he unties the connections between the Colombian cocaine dealer, the New York banker steering money to offshore tax havens, the Albanian forcing women into prostitution, and the Chinese market stall-holder selling counterfeit DVDs. Naim reports that legitimate global trade has doubled since 1990 from $5 to $10 trillion. Meanwhile, money laundering has gone up tenfold, exceeding $1 trillion a year. Smuggling and money laundering have always existed, but Naim shows how they have increased at a staggering pace in the wake of globalization, despite new government controls since 9/11. The main culprits are the collapse of the Iron Curtain and state deregulation. As the reach of organized crime has expanded, governments have failed to keep up. Naim illustrates the problems with stories about A.Q. Khan, the father of Pakistan's atomic bomb who sold nuclear technology to North Korea and Libya; Walter C. Anderson, an American who was accused of hiding $450 million in offshore accounts to evade taxes; and Vladimir Montesinos, the Peruvian intelligence czar who is on trial for trafficking drugs and arms. The book, while a little dry, will be interesting to policy buffs and aspiring crooks alike. --Alex Roslin
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