Gaining control of Iraq's shadow economy

Four and a half years after freeing Iraqi citizens from a ruthless dictatorship, the country is still mired in poverty, corruption and insurgent violence. These conditions fuel a sprawling, decades-old shadow economy manipulated by elements of organized crime, militias, and insurgents to fund attack...

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Main Author: Ramirez, David S.
Other Authors: Looney, Robert
Published: Monterey California. Naval Postgraduate School 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10945/3244
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spelling ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-32442014-11-27T16:04:31Z Gaining control of Iraq's shadow economy Ramirez, David S. Looney, Robert Kadhim, Abbas Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.) Four and a half years after freeing Iraqi citizens from a ruthless dictatorship, the country is still mired in poverty, corruption and insurgent violence. These conditions fuel a sprawling, decades-old shadow economy manipulated by elements of organized crime, militias, and insurgents to fund attacks on Coalition forces, infrastructure and innocent Iraqi civilians. The shadow economy is also used extensively by the poor and women for subsistence living. The combined effect for Iraqi citizens is they have to survive in a country without adequate institutions and poor governance. The extensive shadow economy diverts funds from legitimate uses by the government such as taxes, funds for reconstruction projects, social protection, social insurance, etc. Numerous agencies are deeply committed to helping the Iraqi government rebuild and formalize the shadow economy. In this thesis I examine the challenges involved in formalizing a shadow economy in the midst of war and the strategies undertaken. I analyze similar efforts to restore peace and stability in Afghanistan with its burgeoning opium trade searching for successful approaches with applicability in Iraq. 2012-03-14T17:37:45Z 2012-03-14T17:37:45Z 2007-09 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10945/3244 695565395 Approved for public release, distribution unlimited Monterey California. Naval Postgraduate School
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description Four and a half years after freeing Iraqi citizens from a ruthless dictatorship, the country is still mired in poverty, corruption and insurgent violence. These conditions fuel a sprawling, decades-old shadow economy manipulated by elements of organized crime, militias, and insurgents to fund attacks on Coalition forces, infrastructure and innocent Iraqi civilians. The shadow economy is also used extensively by the poor and women for subsistence living. The combined effect for Iraqi citizens is they have to survive in a country without adequate institutions and poor governance. The extensive shadow economy diverts funds from legitimate uses by the government such as taxes, funds for reconstruction projects, social protection, social insurance, etc. Numerous agencies are deeply committed to helping the Iraqi government rebuild and formalize the shadow economy. In this thesis I examine the challenges involved in formalizing a shadow economy in the midst of war and the strategies undertaken. I analyze similar efforts to restore peace and stability in Afghanistan with its burgeoning opium trade searching for successful approaches with applicability in Iraq.
author2 Looney, Robert
author_facet Looney, Robert
Ramirez, David S.
author Ramirez, David S.
spellingShingle Ramirez, David S.
Gaining control of Iraq's shadow economy
author_sort Ramirez, David S.
title Gaining control of Iraq's shadow economy
title_short Gaining control of Iraq's shadow economy
title_full Gaining control of Iraq's shadow economy
title_fullStr Gaining control of Iraq's shadow economy
title_full_unstemmed Gaining control of Iraq's shadow economy
title_sort gaining control of iraq's shadow economy
publisher Monterey California. Naval Postgraduate School
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10945/3244
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