664,454 research outputs found
ASSUMPTIONS REGARDING THE ECONOMIC AND FINANCIAL CRIME IN THE EUROPEAN UNION AND IN ROMANIA
Shock wave produced by the financial crisis started from the "heart of world finance” - United States of America, suddenly hit the European Union economy and finance, especially strong states. Recent studies conducted on the economies of EU highlighted serious problems in functioning and underlying weaknesses in the policies pursued by their governmentseconomic crime, financial crime, fraud, underground economy.
Organized Crime and Foreign Direct Investment: The Italian Case
This paper examines the impact of organized crime on the regional distribution of foreign direct investment (FDI) inflows into Italy. The incidence of crime has been calculated considering the number of complaints for different crimes. The analysis shows how the correlation between organized crime is both negative and significant. This relationship appears strong even when a financial investment incentives indicator is included into the regressions. Furthermore, such a correlation between crime and FDI seems to be valid only for certain crimes, traditionally related to the presence of organized crime of the Mafia type. Although our analysis shows that organized crime is, in itself, a disincentive for investment, it also suggests that certain levels of crime can be perceived by foreign investors as a signal of an unfavorable business climate.FDI determinants, Italy, crime, regional attractiveness
Weak institutions and credit availability: the impact of crime on bank loans
This paper analyzes the relationship between the terms on bank loans and local crime rates, employing a sample of over 300,000 bank-firm relationships. Controlling for firm, market and bank characteristics the results show that where the crime rate is higher borrowers pay higher interest rates, pledge more collateral, and resort less to asset-backed loans and more to revolving credit lines than borrowers in low-crime areas. The evidence also suggests that access to credit is adversely affected by crime. The offenses that affect the loan market are those that exogenously increase firm fragility (extortion, organized crime) and raise loss given default (fraud, fraudulent bankruptcy).crime, governance and growth, financial development, credit markets, banks
Twenty Years of Collapse and Counting: The Cost of Failure in Somalia
Analyzes the human and financial costs of Somali conflicts and famines, including costs of humanitarian and development aid; peacekeeping, military responses and aid, anti-terrorism, and diplomacy; piracy; and international crime and illicit money flows
The Financial Conditions of Illinois Human Service Nonprofits
This document examines the financial conditions of Illinois human service nonprofit organizations. The first section examines median and aggregate data of all nonprofits and the second section examines the financial conditions of the various nonprofit sectors, including Mental Health and Crisis Intervention; Crime and Legal-Related; Employment; Food, Agriculture, and Nutrition; Housing and Shelter; Youth Development; and Other Human Services
The (Hidden) Financial Flows of Terrorist and Transnational Crime Organizations: A Literature Review and Some Preliminary Empirical Results
The financial means of international terror and transnational organized crime organizations are analyzed. First, some short remarks about the organization of international terror organizations are made. Second and in a much more detailed way a literature review is provided about the financing of terrorist and transnational organized crime organizations, their sources and the various methods they use. Third, an attempt is made to estimate the financial means of terror organizations with the help of a latent estimation approach (MIMIC procedure). The figures show that Al Qaeda and other terror organizations have sufficient financial means. Fourth, some remarks are made about the negative effects of terror on the economy in highly developed countries and some strategies are presented to combat (the financing) of terrorism.Financial flows of terrorist organizations, financial flows of transnational organized crime, Hawala banking, money laundering, transnational organized crime, terrorist organizations, kinds of terrorist financing
The Financial Flows of the Transnational Crime: Some Preliminary Empirical Results
Until 2008, the growth of the world economy was quite strong and improved the economic well-being all over the globe, but this development was also accompanied by some risks. One of them is transnational crime, which has shown a remarkable increase in the last 20 years3. This raises the following two questions: (1) How is transnational crime financed, and what do we know about this financing? (2) What economic implications does transnational crime have? In this contribution question (2) will be very briefly answered, however the main focus lies on providing a more detailed answer on the financing of transnational crime (question 1). Additionally a detailed analysis of the finances of transnational crime is crucial to reduce their financial options, so that the basis of their operations is at least limited. Such an analysis is another goal of this chapter. My paper is structured as follows: section 2 provides a literature review on the kinds of transnational crime financing. Section 3 shows the infiltration of transnational crime into the economic system. In section 4 some conclusions and policy recommendations are drawn.
Strategic market position of the European Crime Prevention Network
The activities and tasks of the European Crime Prevention Network (EUCPN), established in 2001, have significantly expanded over the past two decades. In view of the further implementation of its multiannual strategy, the EUCPN has commissioned a study into its current and future strategic market position, conducted with the financial support of the EU’s Internal Security Fund – Police. This book reflects the results.
Whilst the EUCPN proves a well-equipped, versatile and multipurpose network in the EU crime prevention area, consolidation and further boosting are due. Key suggestions are to enhance outputs and visibility, to intensify existing partnerships, to broaden target and beneficiary audiences, including at local levels, to implement practice-oriented, multi-language and multimedia approaches, and to focus on the implementation, monitoring, coordination and evaluation
of crime prevention policies or strategies, including through cooperation with academia
Education and Crime over the Life Cycle
This paper provides
a framework within which to study the equilibrium impact of
alternative policies. We develop an overlapping generation,
life-cycle model with endogenous education and crime choices.
Education and crime depend on different dimensions of heterogeneity,
which takes the form of differences in innate ability and wealth at
birth as well as employment shocks. The model is calibrated to match
education enrolments, aggregate (property) crime rate and some
features of the wealth distribution. In our numerical experiments we
find that policies targeting crime reduction through increases in
high school graduation rates are more cost-effective than simple
incapacitation policies. The cost-effectiveness of high
school subsidies increases significantly if they are targeted at the
wealth poor. Financial incentives to high school
graduation have radically different implications in general and
partial equilibriumCrime, Education, Life Cycle
The Determinant of Money Laundering: Evidence from Italian Regions
Following the INTERPOL’s definition, money laundering is: “any act or attempted act to conceal or disguise
the identity of illegally obtained proceeds so that they appear to have originated from legitimate sources”. Illegally
obtained funds are laundered and moved around the world using front companies, intermediaries and other money
transmitters. In this way, the illegal funds remain hidden and are integrated into the legal economy. Such type of crime
undermines financial institutions’ and jurisdictions’ reputation, compromises investors’ trust in them, and therefore
weakens the entire financial system. By using annual data for the Italian regions (NUTS-2) over the period 2008 to 2015,
this work aims to investigate the determinants of money laundering in Italy. Given the high heterogeneity in terms of
economic and institutional characteristics, as well as for the activity of organized crime in financial-related activities,
Italy is a compelling case study. Our main findings reveal that in most of the Italian regions enforcement activities do
exert significant deterrence on criminal behaviors: a negative relationship between enforcement and illegal trafficking of
waste can be identified only for very high levels of enforcement efforts. Moreover, we find that the major determinants
influencing the rate of money laundering differ between northern-central and southern regions, confirming the existence
of a regional dualism. In particular, while in the northern-central area the crime rate is positively related to the level of
corruption, the incidence of mafia-type crimes and negatively to the education attainment, in the southern regions money
laundering is positively related to the size of the gaming and gambling sector
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