Ronen Palan
Ronen Palan | |
---|---|
Born | Tax havens | 21 March 1957
Website | Ronan Palan |
Part of a series on |
Taxation |
---|
An aspect of fiscal policy |
Ronen Palan (born 21 March 1957) is an Israeli-born economist and Professor of
tax havens.[2] Palan has argued that offshore finance "is certainly not the sole cause for the decline of the nation-state, but it must be seen as an important contributing factor to the decline".[3]
In January 2016, Palan acted as an advisor to the BBC's documentary, Britain’s Trillion Pound Paradise – Inside Cayman.[4] In May 2017, Palan also featured in the documentary, "The Spider's Web: Britain's Second Empire" on the U.K.'s relationships with tax havens.[5]
As a student, Palan attended the
Richard Murphy, Christian Chavagneux, Cornell University Press, 2010).[1]
Palan is married and has two sons.
Books
- Palan, Ronen; Murphy, Richard; Chavagneux, Christian (2009). Tax Havens: How Globalization Really Works. Cornell University Press. ISBN 0-8014-7612-7.
- Palan, Ronen (2003) The imagined economies of globalization. Sage
References
- ^ a b c "Professor Ronen Palan, Professor of International Political Economy, Department of International Politics". Retrieved 12 March 2013.
- ^ Browning, Lynnley (22 September 2010). "Swiss banking secrecy in Asia". The New York Times. Retrieved 30 September 2010.
- ^ Davies, Nick (12 April 2002). "Lawsuit lifts lid on high-stakes game of deals with taxman". The Guardian. Retrieved 15 November 2009.
- City University of London. 25 January 2016.
Professor Ronen Palan helped produce Britain's Trillion Pound Paradise – Inside Cayman
- ^ The Spider's Web: Britain's Second Empire (video link to the documentary, published by Queuepolitely on 14 September 2018)
- ^ Palan, Ronen Peter (1990). Patterns of non-governmental interactions as a bridge between the structuralist theory of the state and the study of international relations (PhD). London School of Economics and Political Science. Retrieved 23 March 2021.