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The Financial Action Task Force (FATF) has greylisted South Africa, along with Nigeria, for insufficient regulation of financial crimes like money laundering and terrorist financing. South Africa is the second G20 nation after Turkey to be greylisted.
Although the General Laws (Anti-Money Laundering & Combating Terrorism Financing) Amendment Act and Protection of Constitutional Democracy Against Terrorist & Related Activities Amendment Acts, were passed in December 2022, this was not enough for FATF and South Africa is under increased monitoring and is now actively working with the FATF to address the strategic deficiencies in its regimes to counter money laundering, terrorist financing, and proliferation financing.
As indicated in the announcement from FATF on 24 February 2023 (see: https://www.fatf-gafi.org/en/publications/High-risk-and-other-monitored-jurisdictions/Increased-monitoring-february-2023.html) and a fact sheet published by the Treasury Department (see: 2023022501 FATF Grey Listing Fact Sheet.pdf (treasury.gov.za)), South Africa's eight point action plan includes:
The potential implications of the greylisting range from higher interest rates and inflation, a weakening of the Rand (which has already been seen), reduced inbound foreign investment, less offshore investment and increased costs and delays due to greater compliance requirements for South African transactions.
Hopefully there are lessons to be learned from the Mauritian experience, where the government's efforts there led to its greylisting being removed within two years.
Authored by Laurie Hammond.