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Active HORIZON European Commission

The Whiteness of Wealth Management: Colonial Economic Structure, Racism, and the Emergence of Tax Havens in the Global South

€1.5M EUR

Funder European Commission
Recipient Organization Leuphana Universitat Luneburg
Country Germany
Start Date Apr 01, 2024
End Date Mar 31, 2029
Duration 1,825 days
Number of Grantees 2
Roles Coordinator; Participant
Data Source European Commission
Grant ID 101116229
Grant Description

Tropical islands are often stigmatized as tax havens. But only a few tropical islands are important exporters of financial services. This is surprising since many of them feature attributes associated with tax havenry. They are small, sovereign, reachable from major financial centers within a few hours, and practice British common law.

Why have so few applied tax havenry as a development strategy, nonetheless?

Conventional wisdom suggests that political stability, often measured with contemporary indicators of good governance, makes the difference. The perception of political stability among foreign investors is, however, interwoven with racist biases.

Previous research shows that tropical islands had to emphasize their British heritage, essentially a code for whiteness, to attract foreign capital during decolonization.

WOWMAs objective is thus to explain why some tropical island jurisdictions were better able than others to convey stability through an image of whiteness in this historical period.

In contrast to previous research emphasizing the rule of law, WOWMA investigates the hypothesis that the absence of income taxes paired with white control over government distinguished emerging tax havens from other tropical islands.

To this end, WOWMA (1) proposes a new theory on the emergence of tax havenry in the Global South, linking an islands economic structure under colonial rule to the absence of income taxes and the persistence of white oligarchy; (2) applies causal inference methods on original historical data gathered from archival sources; and (3) probes the persistence of racist biases in investment decisions through conjoint experiments.The project provides unprecedented depth in the study of small island states political and economic development.

It foregrounds the entanglement of racism with perceptions of political stability and develops new strategies for its measurement.

All Grantees

Leuphana Universitat Luneburg; Freie Universitaet Berlin

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