G7 countries have long proved to be attractive destinations for dirty money thanks to widely exploited vulnerabilities in their defences, limited capacity of enforcement agencies, and the complacency – or wilful lack of compliance – of intermediaries (often referred to as ‘enablers’). In spite of repeated commitments on paper – such as those made at the Summit for Democracy in December 2021 and last year’s G7 interior and security commitments under the UK presidency – these shortcomings remain and have yet to be addressed in practice by G7 members.