Presenting in Moscow the results of a two-year study of corruption,
the director of the INDEM think tank, Georgii Satarov, said that
Russians pay about $37 billion each year in bribes and unofficial
fees, a sum that is roughly equivalent to the revenue portion of the
2002 federal budget and equals about 12 percent of the country's
gross domestic product, Russian news agencies reported on 22 May.
Satarov, a former political adviser to President Boris Yeltsin, said
that the study, which was funded by the Danish government via the
World Bank, demonstrates that corruption remains a formidable element
of the Russian economy. About 90 percent of the bribes are paid by
businesses, with roughly 75 percent going to low-level local
officials, although Satarov said that many bribes are then passed on
to more highly placed officials. Among the leading "corruption
services," the study named export licensing and quotas, state budget
transactions, tax transfers, customs duties, privatization deals, and
the servicing of regional debts to the federal budget. Although
corruption has a long history in Russia, Satarov argued that it has
increased massively in scale and become much more cynical in form
during the postcommunist period.
...as Russia hopes to repatriate money laundering in Switzerland
During the recent visit of a delegation from the Russian Audit
Chamber to Geneva, investigators showed a keen interest in
repatriating Swiss bank deposits that allegedly stem from several
money-laundering cases from the 1990s, Le Temps reported on 21 May.
"We are talking about a sum of at least 300-500 million Swiss francs
[$190-316 million]," an unidentified Geneva lawyer with whom the
Audit Chamber has had contacts told the newspaper. Moscow is
especially interested in a controversial deal involving Angolan debt
to the Soviet Union that was carried out by then-Deputy Finance
Minister Andrei Vavilov, and an estimated $300 million belonging to
Russian businessman Sergei Maiorov, who allegedly illegally
transferred these funds out of Russia.
(RFE/RL 22.v.02)