Abstract

This compares the magnitudes of two forms of economic interaction between the developed and developing world. The first is the amount of economic foreign aid provided by the developed world to the developing world during a single year. The second is an estimate of the yearly amount that illegal price fixing cartels, comprised of companies from the U.S., the EU, and Japan, overcharge – steal! – from purchasers in these same countries. This comparison shows these amounts are roughly equivalent. If anything, cartels probably steal more from the developing world than the developed world gives them in economic assistance. This means that all of the economic foreign assistance that developed countries provide to the developing world, or its equivalent, is illegally stolen back by the developing world's companies. The devastating effects of these cartels means, in effect, that the developing world gives no net economic foreign aid to the developed world. This conclusion has a number of implications. This is very much a work in progress. Suggestions are most welcome, to rlande@ubalt.edu. I have posted two versions of this thesis. The first was prepared for a speech. The second is the start of an article, but it is only an undeveloped skeleton, with many parts needing to be developed.

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