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Main Authors: Jensen, Rasmus Ingemann Tuffveson, Hansen, Sebastian Holmby, Rose, Kalle Johannes
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2508.18932
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author Jensen, Rasmus Ingemann Tuffveson
Hansen, Sebastian Holmby
Rose, Kalle Johannes
author_facet Jensen, Rasmus Ingemann Tuffveson
Hansen, Sebastian Holmby
Rose, Kalle Johannes
contents Almost all countries in the world require banks to report suspicious transactions to national authorities. The reports are known as suspicious transaction or activity reports (we use the former term) and are intended to help authorities detect and prosecute money laundering. In this paper, we investigate the relationship between suspicious transaction reports and convictions for money laundering in the European Union. We use publicly available data from Europol, the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, and the European Sourcebook of Crime and Criminal Justice Statistics. To analyze the data, we employ a log-transformation and fit pooled (i.e., ordinary least squares) and fixed effects regression models. The fixed effects models, in particular, allow us to control for unobserved country-specific confounders (e.g., different laws regarding when and how reports should be filed). Initial results indicate that the number of suspicious transaction reports and convictions for money laundering in a country follow a sub-linear power law. Thus, while more reports may lead to more convictions, their marginal effect decreases with their amount. The relationship is robust to control variables such as the size of shadow economies and police forces. However, when we include time as a control, the relationship disappears in the fixed effects models. This suggests that the relationship is spurious rather than causal, driven by cross-country differences and a common time trend. In turn, a country cannot, ceteris paribus and with statistical confidence, expect that an increase in suspicious transaction reports will drive an increase in convictions. Our results have important implications for international anti-money laundering efforts and policies. (...)
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2508_18932
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Do More Suspicious Transaction Reports Lead to More Convictions for Money Laundering?
Jensen, Rasmus Ingemann Tuffveson
Hansen, Sebastian Holmby
Rose, Kalle Johannes
General Economics
Economics
Almost all countries in the world require banks to report suspicious transactions to national authorities. The reports are known as suspicious transaction or activity reports (we use the former term) and are intended to help authorities detect and prosecute money laundering. In this paper, we investigate the relationship between suspicious transaction reports and convictions for money laundering in the European Union. We use publicly available data from Europol, the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, and the European Sourcebook of Crime and Criminal Justice Statistics. To analyze the data, we employ a log-transformation and fit pooled (i.e., ordinary least squares) and fixed effects regression models. The fixed effects models, in particular, allow us to control for unobserved country-specific confounders (e.g., different laws regarding when and how reports should be filed). Initial results indicate that the number of suspicious transaction reports and convictions for money laundering in a country follow a sub-linear power law. Thus, while more reports may lead to more convictions, their marginal effect decreases with their amount. The relationship is robust to control variables such as the size of shadow economies and police forces. However, when we include time as a control, the relationship disappears in the fixed effects models. This suggests that the relationship is spurious rather than causal, driven by cross-country differences and a common time trend. In turn, a country cannot, ceteris paribus and with statistical confidence, expect that an increase in suspicious transaction reports will drive an increase in convictions. Our results have important implications for international anti-money laundering efforts and policies. (...)
title Do More Suspicious Transaction Reports Lead to More Convictions for Money Laundering?
topic General Economics
Economics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2508.18932