Gov/en/Portal:R&D/Innovations:Reverse Abuse: Difference between revisions
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<div style="background:#eef6ff;border:1px solid #4a90d9;border-left:4px solid #2a6db0;border-radius:4px;padding:9px 14px;margin:10px 0;font-size:0.9rem;">📣 <b>Preview of an Open Call (theoretical).</b> This programme previews a future [[Gov/en/Portal:R&D/Open-Call:Reverse Abuse|Open Call for legal financial-optimization ideas]] — part of a wider family of <b>Open Calls for programmes</b> (and for markets) that combine production, transformation and transport contracts. It is a <b>transition measure</b>, prospective only: <b>no deadline for now</b>, no guarantee of implementation. The Discussion tab is already open for suggestions.</div> | |||
== Reverse Abuse == | == Reverse Abuse == | ||
Latest revision as of 00:11, 15 June 2026
💡 In simple words: Some big companies use clever legal tricks to keep more money and pay less back to the people who actually make things. Reverse Abuse is a WikiDeal idea: use those same legal tricks — but in reverse — so that small producers and farmers keep the money themselves instead.
⚠️ Not yet approved. This page describes a proposal that is still under community review. It is documented here so it can be discussed, improved and endorsed.
Reverse Abuse
Programme-type Innovation — WikiDeal R&D
| Type | Programme (ensemble of contracts) |
| Origin | 🟢 Théo Bondolfi |
| Status | Prototype 1 — Under R&D study |
| Category | Market · Social · Transition |
| Finality | Non-profit (producers and community benefit) |
| See also | Deprivatization · Exit to Community · Programmes |
What is Reverse Abuse?
Reverse Abuse is a proposed WikiDeal R&D programme that identifies legal mechanisms historically used by large multinationals to optimize financial flows to their own advantage — including aggressive tax optimization, tax havens, and complex holding structures — and then deploys those same legal mechanisms in the service of small producers, cooperatives, and user-governed supply chains.
The name deliberately signals its logic: the same statutory and financial instruments that have been used against producers and communities are turned around and made to serve those very producers. What changes is not the legal vehicle but the direction of the financial flows and the beneficiary of the surplus.
This is explicitly framed as lawful, transparent, and non-speculative activity. Reverse Abuse does not advocate or involve money laundering, tax fraud, or any illegal conduct. All structures proposed under this programme operate within applicable law and aim at full transparency.
The Problem: Extractive Financial Architecture
Global supply chains — tea, cocoa, garments, electronics — are often governed by financial architectures in which:
- Multinational holding companies register intellectual property and financial instruments in low-tax jurisdictions
- Intercompany transfer pricing reduces the taxable income recognised in producing countries
- Complex subsidiary chains legally transfer value from producing territories to holding territories
- Small producers and local communities receive a small fraction of the final market value of what they produce
These mechanisms are generally legal under current international tax frameworks, even when widely considered unfair or contrary to the public interest. Regulatory reform at the international level has been slow and partial.
The Response: Same Tools, Opposite Direction
Reverse Abuse proposes that the same statutory instruments — holding structures, subsidiary networks, entities incorporated in favourable jurisdictions — can be created and owned by small producers themselves (or by their cooperatives, syndicates, compensation funds, and user-governed platforms).
The critical difference lies in who controls the entity and where the financial flows end up:
| Dimension | Conventional Multinational Use | Reverse Abuse Use |
|---|---|---|
| Legal structure | Holding / subsidiary network | Same structure types |
| Ownership | Shareholders / private investors | Producers, cooperatives, users |
| Financial flow destination | Accumulation in low-tax territory | Repatriation to producers and community funds |
| Finality | Private profit maximisation | Non-profit: compensation and shared commons |
| Transparency | Often opaque | Full transparency (WikiDeal standard) |
Mechanism: Repatriation to Producers
Under the Reverse Abuse model, the financial surplus generated by lawful tax optimization is repatriated to small producers through:
- Compensation funds (caisses de compensation): pooled reserves that distribute benefits directly to producer members
- Syndicates and unions: collective bargaining and distribution bodies governed by producer majorities
- User-owned companies: entities whose statutes establish that financial flows benefit the members (producers, users) rather than outside shareholders
- WikiDeal Programme contracts: the standard WikiDeal contract stack (service agreement, governance charter, distribution rules) adapted to the supply chain context
The result is a supply chain in which the producers sell to a company they own — meaning the margin that would have gone to an extractive intermediary remains inside the producer community.
Why This Works: A Transition Mechanism
Reverse Abuse is conceived as a transition mechanism — not a permanent parallel economy, but a structured pathway toward producer sovereignty. Its logic operates on two levels simultaneously:
- Direct benefit: producers immediately receive a larger share of the value they create
- Systemic drainage: as more producers migrate to user-owned supply chains, the financial flows available to extractive companies diminish; companies whose business model depends on captive producer relationships naturally contract when those producers choose alternative structures
This mirrors the WikiDeal Deprivatization logic applied to global supply chains: the goal is not confrontation but migration — redirecting participation away from extractive structures and toward community-controlled ones.
Example: A Tea Supply Chain
As an illustrative case (not an operational proposal): tea producers in a producing country might collectively establish:
- A producer-owned holding entity (potentially registered in a jurisdiction with favourable rules, just as multinationals do)
- A distribution subsidiary in the consuming country
- A licensing agreement between the two entities (on terms favourable to producers)
- A compensation fund governed by a producer-majority board
The tea producers sell directly to their own company. The margin previously captured by an extractive intermediary is instead distributed to producer members via the compensation fund. The entire structure uses the same legal instruments as multinationals; the governance and beneficiary structure differ entirely.
Relationship to WikiDeal Programmes
Reverse Abuse is classified as a programme-type innovation: it is expressed not as a single marketplace or rule, but as an ensemble of contracts that together constitute a supply-chain governance programme. It draws on and extends several existing WikiDeal mechanisms:
- Exit to Community — progressive transfer of control to users/producers
- Deprivatization — reclaiming extractive markets as user-governed commons
- Collaborative Contract Editing — contracts versioned and community-validated
- User Groups — autonomous communities with their own governance
In the Programmes framework, Reverse Abuse would most naturally be explored under the Market and Social categories — specifically in contexts where existing supply chains can be progressively migrated to producer-controlled governance.
Legal and Ethical Framework
The programme operates strictly within the following constraints:
- Lawful only: all structures and financial flows must comply with applicable national and international law
- Transparent: full disclosure of entity structures, financial flows, and governance rules (WikiDeal standard)
- Non-profit finality: surplus repatriated to producers, not accumulated by a controlling entity
- Not money laundering: no concealment of origin or destination of funds; structures are explicitly designed for full auditability
- Not tax fraud: optimization uses available legal provisions; no false declarations or hidden transactions
The programme is proposed as an R&D hypothesis for study, legal review, and community validation through Open Calls. No operational structure is established or implied by this page.
Status and Next Steps
As of the date of this page, Reverse Abuse is an R&D concept under study. Proposed next steps include:
- Legal review by volunteer or partner lawyers (via Peer Endorsement)
- Identification of pilot supply chains suitable for a proof of concept
- Structured Open Call for economists, cooperative legal experts, and supply-chain specialists
- Contract drafting within the WikiDeal Collaborative Contract Editing framework
See also: All Innovations · Programmes · Deprivatization · Exit to Community · Co-opetition · R&D Portal