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A 2009 G20 official document stated that the era of banking secrecy
is over but is it? If banking secrecy is the result of market
mechanisms, it suggests that worldwide demand and supply are likely
to remain for a long time to come. Since the Global Financial
Crisis, many countries have fought to combat banking secrecy, yet
it permeates both national and international industries, and global
efforts to prevent banking secrecy have been ineffective or at
worst counterproductive. In this book, the authors show how the
growth of criminal activity has systematically generated a demand
for banking secrecy. They explore how national politicians and
international banks have been motivated to supply banking secrecy
through economic and political incentives, and shed light on the
economics and politics of banking secrecy. This book takes a
multidisciplinary approach to reveal the variety of behaviours and
processes involved in making dirty money appear clean, providing an
in-depth study of financial transactions which are characterized by
a special purpose: hiding the originally illegal sources. This work
will be of interest to students and scholars of economics and
finance, and those with an interest in banking secrecy, global
finance, international banking, and financial regulation.
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