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Italy: Investigators ignore role of banks and political leaders
in Parmalat scandal
By Chris Sverige
11 February 2004
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More than six weeks after the biggest corporate scandal of
2003 came to light, investigators are about to issue formal charges
against Parmalats top managers. The authorities have, however,
shown little interest in exposing the role of banks and leading
politicians in this disaster. Meanwhile, the government of Prime
Minister Silvio Berlusconi is scrambling to restore investor confidence
amid growing anger among those hurt by the multinationals
collapse.
Over the past month, Parmalat executives, along with the head
of what was the Italian branch of the accounting firm Grant Thornton,
have been in custody in both Milan and Parma and have undergone
lengthy interrogations by authorities. Although the interrogations
are being carried out behind closed doors, there have been a multitude
of leaks that, when combined with statements made to the public,
begin to spell out how this scandal came to be.
It appears that the former head of Parmalats finance
department, Fausto Tonna, has been the most willing to speak.
According to reports, Tonna has elaborated on many of the schemes
that Parmalat employed to continue appearing profitable even as
the companys debt grew exponentially. The hole in Parmalats
books is currently estimated at over 14 billion euros ($18 billion)
[See The Parmalat scandal:
Europes ten-billion euro black hole].
High-level public- and private-sector complicity
While the investigation has substantiated the allegations originally
reported when the scandal broke, recent testimony has gone further,
pointing to the complicity in these schemes of not only the accounting
firms, but also high-level public officials and banks. There has
been a clear move by the authorities, however, to restrict the
investigation to the activities of the founder and former head
of Parmalat, Calisto Tanzi, and his circle.
The testimony of Fausto Tonna has, in fact, focused on the
role of political figures and financial institutions. Among those
who Tonna asserted were actively involved in procuring loans with
preferential rates to Parmalat are former interior minister and
president of Italy Francesco Cossiga, former agriculture minister
Caligero Mannino, and member of parliament Franco Bonferroni (all
Christian Democrats), as well as the wife of Lamberto Dini. Mr.
Dini, a center-left politician, has served as both prime minister
and executive director of the International Monetary Fund.
In reference to the banks, Tonna said that they illegally exposed
thousands of small investors by selling them Parmalat bonds. According
to Tonna, there was a clause in the bonds that prohibited their
being broken up by the investment banks and resold. In breaking
this rule, he argued, the investment banks showed that they were
aware of the true state of Parmalat and knowingly passed the risk
on to unsuspecting small investors.
In addition to Tonnas testimony, former Parmalat officials
have recently come out of the woodwork telling stories of high-level
corruption. One such official, Aldo Uva, who was CEO of Parmalat
USA from 1999 to 2001, related to the magazine America Oggi
(America Today) that several high-level managers had
told him Parmalat would have gone bankrupt in the mid-1980s were
it not for the secret intervention of a high-ranking member of
the ruling Christian Democrats. In addition, one top internal
financial officer disclosed that he had never, in decades of working
for the company, signed off on an annual report, Because
that would surely have led to prison.
Other reports from the audit being carried out by PricewaterhouseCoopers
have revealed that more than 40 banks granted credit to Parmalat
to the tune of over 5 billion euros based on supermarket sales
receipts that were obviously duplicated to inflate revenue figures.
Citibank alone granted over 300 million euros based on these documents.
According to a transcript that has been released, Claudio Pessina,
who was a manager in Parmalats internal accounting department,
asserted that Citibank officials were aware of this trickery as
early as 1995.
This testimony and the findings of auditors are beginning to
tell a story that is much bigger than the tale of a multinational
firm that managed to hoodwink banks, accounting firms
and regulators for decades. It appears that a massive bribery
scandal could be uncovered, involving both large banks and high-level
government officialsif the investigators would pursue this
evidence.
Adding to the intrigue is the recent death of a top finance
department aide. On January 23, Alessandro Bassi, Fausto Tonnas
right-hand man in the finance department, died in an apparent
suicide after falling from a bridge near Parma. According to the
investigators, Bassi was a material witness who had been very
cooperative in the investigation.
Politicians scramble to restore investor confidence
In the face of this scandal, bourgeois politicians on both
sides of the aisle are maneuvering to both make political gain
and avoid a more thorough investigation. The Berlusconi government
at first attempted to use the scandal to curtail the independence
of the central bank. In early January, Finance Minister Giulio
Tremonti outlined a plan to bring the Banca dItalia under
government control.
As the scandal grew and the role of politicians in creating
the disaster came out, however, Berlusconi backtracked. To Italys
richest individual, who had long-standing connections with the
Socialist Party (which shared power with the Christian Democrats
during the 1980s), the thought of public scrutiny eventually shifting
to his own media and real estate empires presumably engendered
second thoughts. By the end of January, he was quoted as saying
that Parmalat was an isolated incident, and that the
system was merely in need of a tune-up.
Many experts were quick to contradict this assessment. Sergio
Cusani, for example, who has himself been linked to high-level
corruption during the post-war period, asserted that Parmalat
is just the first of many scandals that will come to light. Other
commentators have echoed this, stating that the exception to the
rule would be a corporation that did not utilise bribery and falsification.
The collapse of Parmalat, along with two recent major bond
crises that have cost Italian investors dearly, has caused a great
deal of concern among those who have entrusted their life savings
to corporations. More than 150,000 investors were left with nearly
worthless Parmalat bonds, and 40 percent of the funds invested
by Italians are in corporate bonds.
In the face of public opinion clearly at odds with Berlusconis
assessment of the situation, the government has been scrambling
to restore investor confidence. Currently, the cabinet is working
on the final draft of a law that would establish an investor protection
program to reimburse those who lost money due to corporate corruption.
This draft has not yet been spelled out in detail.
An additional fear for investors is the exposure of supplemental
pension funds to substantial losses. Although Italys state
pension fund provides for a higher average payout than, for example,
the US Social Security system, more and more workers have been
forced to seek additional retirement income by investing in supplemental
pension funds, which concentrate on the private sector. This is
a significant change from the post-war period, when most Italians
invested their savings in government bonds. According to Lucio
Francario, head of the supplemental pension oversight commission
(COVIP, 14 million euros of supplemental pension funds were invested
in Parmalat bonds), as of the end of 2003.
If, as is widely believed, the methods used by Parmalat to
accumulate billions in debt are widespread among corporations,
the implications for those who have invested their savings in
securities are disastrous, and there is little likelihood that
a governmental insurance plan could fully compensate all investors.
Diversionary response from the opposition
As for the official left of Italian politics, the
response to the scandal has been characteristically weak. At a
forum organised by the Italian Communists (PdCI), party leader
Oliviero Diliberto denounced isolated sick spots within
the capitalist system, pointing the finger at off-shore financial
groups operating in countries such as Luxemburg and the Cayman
Islands. According to Diliberto, these fifty or so rogue
states are ultimately to blame for global financial instability.
It is certainly true that Parmalat exploited these fiscal
paradises to hide embezzled funds and create fictitious
profits. In addition to the use made by Parmalat managers of their
Cayman Islands unit to create truly outlandish balance sheets,
authorities have in recent weeks located 17 million euros in accounts
opened by Parmalat executives under fictitious names in countries
such as Switzerland and Monte Carlo.
Focusing on these off-shore activities, however,
is the official left parties way of diverting attention
from what is becoming increasingly clear: equally criminal activities
were committed on shore, in the halls of government
and the board rooms of banks in Italy, the United States, and
elsewhere.
The opposition parties in Italy steadfastly refuse to ask the
question: What is ultimately driving corporations to take these
measures, and why is it that banks and political leaders not only
do not prevent them, but actively aid them? This question can
only be answered by undertaking a serious analysis of the deepening
crisis of global capitalism in the last few decades of the twentieth
century.
The fact that a small family business such as Parmalat could
grow into a multinational food concern with over 36,000 employees
and operations in 30 countriesall the while operating at
a losscannot simply be attributed to the genius of its founder
and the opportunism of a number of small nations.
On the contrary, it is only by virtue of the irrational and
anarchic nature of the profit system that such a development could
take place. Only through the replacement of this system with a
rationally planned economic system, in which production is organised
to meet the needs of society, can such scheming and collusion
be prevented in the future.
See Also:
The Parmalat scandal: Europes
ten-billion euro black hole
[6 January 2004]
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