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Whats the Matter With Delaware?
How First State Has Favored Rich, Powerful, Criminaland How It Costs

Englisch · Fester Einband

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Beschreibung

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How the "First State" has enabled international crime, sheltered tax dodgers, and diverted hard-earned dollars from the rest of us The legal home to over a million companies, Delaware has more registered businesses than residents. Why do virtually all of the biggest corporations in the United States register there? Why do so many small companies choose to set up in Delaware rather than their home states? Why do wealthy individuals form multiple layers of private companies in the state? This book reveals how a systematic enterprise lies behind the business-friendly corporate veneer, one that has kept the state afloat financially by diverting public funds away from some of the poorest people in the United States and supporting dictators and criminals across the world. Hal Weitzman shows how the de facto capital of corporate America has provided safe haven to money launderers, kleptocratic foreign rulers, and human traffickers, and facilitated tax dodging and money laundering by multinational companies and international gangsters. Revenues from Delaware's business-formation industry, known as the Franchise, account for two-fifths of the state's budget and have helped to keep the tax burden on its residents among the lowest in the United States. Delaware derives enormous political clout from the Franchise, effectively writing the corporate code for the entire country--and because of its outsized influence on corporate America, the second smallest state in the United States also writes the rules for much of the world. What's the Matter with Delaware? shows how, in Joe Biden's home state, the corporate laws get written behind closed doors, enabling the rich and powerful to do business in the shadows.


Über den Autor / die Autorin

Hal Weitzman is executive director for intellectual capital at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business and editor-in-chief of Chicago Booth Review. He also teaches MBA students and business executives at Chicago Booth. A former Financial Times editor and foreign correspondent, he is the author of Latin Lessons.

Zusammenfassung

How the “First State” has enabled international crime, sheltered tax dodgers, and diverted hard-earned dollars from the rest of us

The legal home to over a million companies, Delaware has more registered businesses than residents. Why do virtually all of the biggest corporations in the United States register there? Why do so many small companies choose to set up in Delaware rather than their home states? Why do wealthy individuals form multiple layers of private companies in the state? This book reveals how a systematic enterprise lies behind the business-friendly corporate veneer, one that has kept the state afloat financially by diverting public funds away from some of the poorest people in the United States and supporting dictators and criminals across the world.

Hal Weitzman shows how the de facto capital of corporate America has provided safe haven to money launderers, kleptocratic foreign rulers, and human traffickers, and facilitated tax dodging and money laundering by multinational companies and international gangsters. Revenues from Delaware's business-formation industry, known as the Franchise, account for two-fifths of the state’s budget and have helped to keep the tax burden on its residents among the lowest in the United States. Delaware derives enormous political clout from the Franchise, effectively writing the corporate code for the entire country—and because of its outsized influence on corporate America, the second smallest state in the United States also writes the rules for much of the world.

What's the Matter with Delaware? shows how, in Joe Biden’s home state, the corporate laws get written behind closed doors, enabling the rich and powerful to do business in the shadows.

Zusatztext

"I can’t recommend this book enough."---Emma Vigeland, The Majority Report podcast

Produktdetails

Autoren Hal Weitzman, Weitzman Hal
Verlag Princeton University Press
 
Sprachen Englisch
Inhalt Buch
Produktform Fester Einband
Erscheinungsdatum 24.05.2022
Thema Sozialwissenschaften, Recht,Wirtschaft > Wirtschaft > Werbung, Marketing
 
EAN 9780691180007
ISBN 978-0-691-18000-7
Anzahl Seiten 296
 
Themen Joe Biden, Policy, investor, Delaware, Reputation, Finance, Shareholder, BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Finance / General, Privacy, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / Economic Policy, BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Corporate Finance / General, BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Business Law, Corporate Finance, income, Employment, BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Taxation / Corporate, Corporation, Tax, Arbitration, Fraud, Financial Services, Corporate Law, Jurisdiction, Customer, Racism, Consumer, Audit, Secrecy, Public Policy, Wealth, Bankruptcy, Law enforcement, Corporate Transparency, Legislation, Corporate crime, Corporate crime / white-collar crime, Interest, revenue, Amendment, beneficial ownership, requirement, duPont, bribery, BUSINESS & ECONOMICS / Free Enterprise & Capitalism, Corporate Tax, Lawyer, Ownership, Finance and the finance industry, Corporate and business tax laws, subsidiary, money laundering, Tax Avoidance, Anonymity, terrorism financing, Debtor, lynching, interest rate, Opportunism, underemployment, dark money, Ownership (psychology), credit card, primary source, Statute, Tax haven, Tax rate, Gift card, Delaware Supreme Court, Iran–Contra affair, Delaware National Guard, Fort Delaware, MBNA, Lost, mislaid, and abandoned property, U.S. state, Michael Scanlon, Kenneth Lay, Collins J. Seitz, delaware state university, Shocks the conscience, Delaware Court of Chancery, Shell corporation, University of Delaware
 

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