Abstract

Money laundering has become a global threat to the international stability and security, leading both to economic and social upheavals, and to an increase in terrorist threats. Therefore, an objective necessity arises for a more detailed study of the money laundering within the scope of its developmental patterns and time-dependent behaviour. The study mission is the development of a theoretical framework and methodological support for modelling the cyclic component of the money laundering risk. The correlation and regression are used for isolating the cyclic component. In turn, the Fourier harmonic analysis allows specifying the cyclic component. Additionally, we carried out a decomposition of time series, analysis of its volatility and persistence using the Hurst exponent. We determined the peaks, downturns and duration of the money laundering cycles in the developed economies and economies in transition, and established the possibility of predicting this process in the medium term. We proved the internationalization of the money laundering and the similarity of behaviour of trends that characterize it both for developed economies among themselves and between groups of countries. The further scientific research is needed within the framework of the imposition of trends in the development of the money laundering processes of some countries on others and the formation of international medium-term anti-fraud strategies.

Highlights

  • The money laundering has assumed such proportions that it can serve as a source of financial and economic upheavals for any state and even individual regions of the world

  • The study of the cyclic component of the money laundering risk based on the Basel AML Index in the context of developed economies is proposed to be done in the following sequence:

  • Analysing the same characteristics of the money laundering process in economies in transition (Table 7), we note that significant differences are not observed in developed economies

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Summary

Introduction

The money laundering has assumed such proportions that it can serve as a source of financial and economic upheavals for any state and even individual regions of the world. The money laundering is inextricably linked with such processes in the country as corruption, capital outflow, use of tax havens by companies and banks to conceal the source of income and to evade taxes. The development of Internet technologies, asymmetric information growth, and an increase in cybercrime aggravated the structure of crime and increased the money laundering risks.

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