Money Laundering, Global Financial Instability, and Tax Havens in the Pacific Islands

Pacific Islands offshore financial centers (OFCS) are battling against the danger that international organizations will cut them off from the global financial system. Since 1999 the image of the region's tax havens has been most shaped by the "horror story" of Nauru—the media's a...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Contemporary Pacific 2003-09, Vol.15 (2), p.237-275
1. Verfasser: van Fossen, Anthony B
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description Pacific Islands offshore financial centers (OFCS) are battling against the danger that international organizations will cut them off from the global financial system. Since 1999 the image of the region's tax havens has been most shaped by the "horror story" of Nauru—the media's account of how Nauru has been involved with the Bank of New York and other banks in tens of billions of dollars of Russian money laundering, tax evasion, and illegal capital flight. In the late 1990s left-of-center governments led international organizations toward a much more aggressive attack on offshore financial centers. Soon international organizations began blacklisting offshore centers and threatening sanctions—with Pacific Islands being prominent targets. The advent of the conservative Bush administration in America defused a number of threats to offshore centers from international organizations, as the United States began to object to Europe's anti-tax haven agenda. While the attacks of 11 September 2001 led international organizations to rebuke offshore centers for helping to finance terrorism, OFC promoters contended that the anti-OFC campaign had been so weakened and qualified since the Bush presidency that it might soon collapse. The future of Pacific Islands offshore centers may rest on the outcome of political struggles in the United States, Europe, and international organizations. Two things are clear: that the dominant media image of a number of Pacific Islands states may continue to be shaped by perceptions of their offshore financial centers (making them targets of moral indignation), and that their international relations may at times be held hostage to the issue of their tax havens.
doi_str_mv 10.1353/cp.2003.0058
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source JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals
subjects Analysis
Bank accounts
Bank crimes
Bank fraud
Banking
Banking legislation
Banks
Blacklisting
Corruption
Economics
Europe
International economic cooperation
International Economic Organizations
International finance
International relations
Money laundering
Oceania
Tax havens
Taxes
United States of America
White Collar Crime
title Money Laundering, Global Financial Instability, and Tax Havens in the Pacific Islands
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