9 Underground Economies and Greece
by Justin Rohrlich
Minyanville
The fortunes
of the world's legitimate economies may rise and fall, but the global
black market is currently booming.
From Somalia's
"pirate stock exchange" to the flourishing illegal organ
trade in Egypt, there are some making money hand-over-fist, under
the table.
We took a look
at nine "alternative economies" and Greece
to find out how people make do on the margins.
Hackers
According to
Wired magazine, the Romanian city of Râmnicu
Vâlcea is known among law enforcement officials
around the world as Hackerville.
Reporter Yudhijit
Bhattacharjee maintains that the term is something of a misnomer;
the town is indeed full of online crooks, but only a small percentage
of them are actual hackers.
Explains Bhattacharjee
in a feature published last January:
Most specialize
in ecommerce scams and malware attacks on businesses. According
to authorities, these schemes have brought tens of millions of
dollars into the area over the past decade, fueling the development
of new apartment buildings, nightclubs, and shopping centers.
Râmnicu Vâlcea is a town whose business is cybercrime,
and business is booming.
When Bhattacharjee
asked a cab driver what all the gold-chained twenty- and thirty-something
men he saw around town driving BMWs and Mercedes did for a living,
the response was, with a laugh, They steal money on the Internet.
But its
not the gleaming storefronts or the new construction
which grinds ahead on nearly every block that mark Râmnicu
Vâlcea as the epicenter of Internet crime. No, its the
more than two dozen Western Union locations within a four-block
area that give Râmnicu Vâlceas secret
away.
Prison
In 2004, smoking
was banned in all federal institutions, and cigarettes, which were
the de facto currency until then, were replaced by
are you
ready for this?
Mackerel.
In a 2008 interview
with the Wall Street Journal, Ed Bales, a prison consultant,
said that mackerel had become the currency of choice in smoke-free
institutions.
These days
a haircut goes for two macks, which are small pouches
of the fish, at about $1 each.
A Fiend
Book, or a pornographic magazine, goes for as few as 40 macks
(if its out-of-date and stained
use your imagination)
and as many as 100 (if its reasonably up-to-date and bodily
fluid-free).
Craving a bit
of heroin? Be prepared to fork over 50 macks.
And, if its
a cellphone youre after, thatll be 400 macks, please.
Mark Muntz,
president of supplier Global Source, told the Journal that his company
unloaded about $1 million worth of mackerel to commissaries in federal
penitentiaries in 2007, though its not particularly popular
elsewhere.
We've
even tried 99-cent stores," Muntz
said. "It never has done very well at all, regardless of
the retailer, but it's very popular in the prisons."
Somali Pirates
Somali pirate
hijackings are financed by what may well be the worlds most
unusual stock market.
A pirate interviewed
by Reuters in 2009 says that, in Haradheere, 250 miles northeast
of Mogadishu, brigands set
up an exchange of sorts to fund their activities.
Four
months ago, during the monsoon rains, we decided to set up this
stock exchange," he said. "We started with 15 maritime
companies and now we are hosting 72. Ten of them have so far
been successful at hijacking.
He explained
that, The shares are open to all and everybody can take part,
whether personally at sea or on land by providing cash, weapons
or useful materials.
After a ransom
payout for releasing a Spanish vessel, investor Sahra
Ibrahim, was lined up outside the exchange waiting for her cut.
I am
waiting for my share after I contributed a rocket-propelled grenade
for the operation, she said. I am really happy and lucky.
I have made $75,000 in only 38 days since I joined the company.
Between June
and September every year,
the number of hijackings drops, as monsoon season makes it difficult
for pirates to operate the small skiffs used in attacks. Come autumn,
the attacks begin once again, which are so frequent that Frontline
Ltd., the worlds largest operator of oil supertankers, which
transports cargo for companies including ExxonMobil, BP, and Chevron,
has in the past considered avoiding the Gulf of Aden altogether.
Pirates know
that the value of the ship and its cargo are usually worth far more
than however much they are demanding, and a few million dollars
is a drop in the bucket in relative terms for the ship operator.
Whatever risks there are in attacking like the chance of
being caught by the international task force of naval vessels patrolling
the area, for one the risk of not collecting a ransom is
lowered still, as corporate Kidnap & Ransom insurance
today seems to be the rule, not the exception.
North Korea
The North Korean
government has reportedly earned itself hard currency over the years
by engaging in drug dealing, weapons manufacturing, and top-drawer
counterfeiting. But the proletariat makes ends meet in decidedly
more pedestrian ways.
"A North
Korean family needs 90,000-100,000 North Korean won for living costs
per month, but workers at state-run factories or enterprises earn
a mere 2,000-8,000 won," one South Korean official told
the Chosun Ilbo newspaper this fall. "So North Koreans
have no choice but to become market traders, cottage industrialists
or transport entrepreneurs to make up for shortages."
With the ration
system in tatters, North Korean citizens survive by moonlighting
from their state duties as private tutors, carpenters, and taxi
drivers.
"Ordinary
North Koreans have become so dependent on the private economy that
they get 80-90% of daily necessities and 60-70% of food from the
markets," the official said.
Public School
Cafeterias
Though the
Los Angeles Unified School District has received accolades for its
new, healthful lunches, the appearance of quinoa and whole wheat
bread has created an underground market for chips, candy,
fast-food burgers and other taboo fare.
Last week,
Van Nuys High School juniors Iraides Renteria and Mayra Gutierrez
told
the LA Times they considered the new school fare "nasty,
rotty stuff," as they pulled three bags of Flamin' Hot Cheetos
and soda from their backpacks which they very well may have
purchased from one of the junk food dealers on campus.
At Van Nuys
High, a Junior ROTC officer and an art teacher have been caught
selling candy, chips, and instant noodles to students. And, as Hank
Cardello, the author of Stuffed:
An Insider's Look at Who's (Really) Making America Fat,
and a former food executive with Coca-Cola, General Mills, and Cadbury-Schweppes,
pointed out in the Atlantic, candy dealers have sprouted up wherever
fresh food is sold:
- Following
the passage of the Texas Public School Nutrition Policy, which
banned candy, enterprising students at Austin High began selling
bags full of candy at premium prices, with some reportedly making
up to $200 per week.
- Similarly,
young entrepreneurs at one Boca Raton (Florida) middle school
make runs to the local Costco (COST) and buy candy bars, doughnuts,
and other high-calorie snacks in bulk. They then offer these goodies
for sale in an environment that has supposedly eradicated such
goodies.
- An eighth-grade
student body vice president in Connecticut was forced to resign
after buying Skittles from an underground "dealer."
- The U.K.
has also seen its share of black market trade in banned foods,
snacks, and beverages, with schools in Oxford, Dorset, and Essex
reporting healthy underground markets trading in food contraband.
The plots ranged from kids selling McDonald's (MCD) hamburgers
in playgrounds to bicycle-riding entrepreneurs hauling bags of
soft drinks and milk chocolate for sale.
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the rest of the article
December
24, 2011
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© 2011 Minyanville
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