Monday, July 11, 2011

Re: State Hypocrisy on Anti-Bribery Laws

In 1977 the US enacted the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA), which
makes it a crime for American citizens and businesses to bribe foreign
public officials
---
somebody needs to remind AIPAC about our laws

On Jul 10, 1:16 pm, MJ <micha...@america.net> wrote:
> State Hypocrisy on Anti-Bribery LawsJuly 10, 2011 byStephan Kinsella
> In 1977 the US enacted theForeign Corrupt Practices Act(FCPA), which makes it a crime for American citizens and businesses to bribe foreign public officials for business purposes. It also imposes certain accounting standards on public US companies, which I wrote about in a 1994 legal article, "The Accounting Provisions of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act." The hypocrisy of the law is blinding: it's okay for the state to bribe (and extort and coerce) private business by means of threats, subsidies, tax breaks, and protectionist legislation; it's okay for businesses to bribe elected officials (campaign contributions); and it's okay for the US central state to bribe foreign governments; and it's okay for US companies to be forced to pay bribes in the form of taxes, that are less than the amount of bribes they would have to pay to foreign officials. But it's not okay for US companies to bribe foreign officials–even if this is customary and essential to "doing business" in that country, and even if this puts American businesses at a competitive disadvantage with companies from other countries that do not prohibit such bribery–some countries even permit such bribes to be reported as an expense for tax purposes.
> As Lew Rockwell notes inExtortion, Private and Public: The Case of Chiquita Banana,Paying bribes and being subject to this kind of extortion is just part of what it takes to do business in many countries. This might sound awful, but the truth is that such payments are often less than the companies would be paying to the tax man in the US, which runs a similar kind of extortion scam but with legal cover.In fact, it was theBananagatescandal (in whichChiquita Brandshad bribed the President ofHondurasto lower taxes) which helped to spur passage of the FCPA.
> Naturally American businesses squealed at the competitive disadvantage this law imposed on them. So of course, instead of repealing this ghastly law, the US used its legislative imperialism to force other countries to adopt similar laws (it also twists the arms of other countries in a number of areas, including IP (see my postIntellectual Property Imperialism), antitrust law, central banking policies,oil & gas ownership by the state, environmental standards, labor standards, tax levels and policy, and so on). It did this mainly by pushing theOECD Anti-Bribery Convention, now ratified by 38 states which are required by the Convention to implement FCPA style laws nationally. The UK has just done so inThe UK Bribery Act, which just came into force this month. According to thisFreshfields release, the UK Bribery Act is "the most far-reaching bribery legislation in the world." The spread of such laws prove the Whig Theory of History is wrong…

--
Thanks for being part of "PoliticalForum" at Google Groups.
For options & help see http://groups.google.com/group/PoliticalForum

* Visit our other community at http://www.PoliticalForum.com/
* It's active and moderated. Register and vote in our polls.
* Read the latest breaking news, and more.

No comments:

Post a Comment