Title: Crime and Justice in the Garden of Eden
1Crime and Justice in the Garden of Eden
- Nalin Kishor
- Richard Damania
- (OPCS/ARD/ESSD Sponsored Presentation, May 4,
2006, Washington DC)
2Scale of Corruption in the Forest Sector
- Corruption in the forest sector is globally
pervasive - Has many forms
- Criminal illegal logging, smuggling, extortion
- Legal but corrupt state capture, institutional
erosion, rent seizing - Scale is vast but quantitative estimates remain
elusive - Illegal logging may cost 10bn per annum
3Does Corruption Contribute to Deforestation?
4Costs of forest corruption include
- Environmental losses local and global (climate
change and biodiversity loss) - Fiscal losses to state from lost royalties
- Livelihood losses to forest dependent communities
- Spread of crime and corruption to other sectors
- Undermining institutions (with growth
implications) - Undermining legitimate forest enterprises
5Why is corruption and crime so globally pervasive
across the forest sector?
- Demand exceeds Sustainable Supply.
- Sustainable Supply is relatively inelastic (trees
grow slowly). - Profits from unsustainable logging profits from
sustainable logging. - Costs of unsustainable logging are public and
benefits private - ? High rents from unsustainable harvesting
- (Indonesia milling capacity 70m cum, allowable
cut 15m cum recipe for corruption)
6Typology of Corruption
- Commercial Scale Illegal Logging
- Big business, commercial operators, links to
other crimes (drug, arms and people smuggling) - Corruption Contagion
- Logs are bulky and can only be sold with
connivance of host of institutions (transport,
customs, police.) - ?More widespread institutional decay
- Weak institutions - impede development and
growth
7Typology of Corruption (cont.)
- Grand Corruption and State Capture
- Legal logging but contributions paid to gain
access to timber concessions - Problem is widespread from Malaysia to Australia
and beyond - Often accompanies land use decisions (cattle
ranching in LAC)
8Typology of Corruption (cont.)
- Also linked to illegal logging
- Poor log tracking system
- The Alchemy of a Log
Broker illegal log Indonesia Gets 20/m3
Broker legal log Malaysia Gets 160/m3
Illegal Logger Indonesia Gets 2.2/m3
9Typology of Corruption (cont.)
- Institutional Erosion and Rent Seizing
- Malaysia, India and Indonesia bequeathed strong
forest institutions - Timber boom 50s and 60s- dismantling of these
institutions - Why?
- Institutions are endogenous To capture high
rents need to erode institutions that impede rent
capture
10Typology of Corruption
- Petty corruption and extortion
- Victims are most often subsistence dwellers
- In scale relatively small but likely huge poverty
and livelihood impacts - Admits of straightforward solutions
- Vest property rights
- Community-based forest management community
woodlots (supply-side intervention)
11Solutions (1)
- Solutions need to be incentive compatible
institutions will not impose reforms that
undermine their self interest - Search for answers that
- Lower rents from unsustainable logging
- (Exogenous) demand side interventions
- Commercial (IKEA type model)
- Responsible public procurement
- Green consumerism
- Supply side interventions that are incentive
compatible - Interventions that make sustainable logging more
attractive than unsustainable logging - Payments for Environmental Services (esp. carbon)
12Solutions (2)
- Search for answers that
- Improve the supply of good governance and
increase incentive to utilize legally harvested
timber - Put native forests under forest management plans
and certification - Development of industrial plantations
- Institutional reform and strengthening
- Reform of forest service, incentive payments,
transparency and accountability (global
monitoring of forest stock, global log-tracking - Improving the forest law enforcement and
compliance system
13Solutions (3)
- Search for answers that
- Generate the demand for good governance and
strengthen the political will - Improve accountability, develop strong
multistakeholder processes (Philippines, Bolivia) - Foster producer and consumer country
collaboration at the regional and international
levels (FLEG processes)
14Solutions (4)
- Search for answers that
- Galvanize international cooperation and provide a
platform for action - Forest Law Enforcement and Governance
(ministerial) processes (collaborative actions by
producer and consumer countries at the
regional and international levels).