Inequality and taxation are fundamental problems of modern times. How and when can democracies tax economic elites? This book develops a theoretical framework that refines and integrates the classic concepts of business’s instrumental (political) power and structural (investment) power to explain the scope and fate of tax initiatives targeting economic elites in Latin America after economic liberalization. In Chile, business’s multiple sources of instrumental power, including cohesion and ties to right parties, kept substantial tax increases off the agenda. In Argentina, weaker business power facilitated significant reform, although specific sectors, including finance and agriculture, occasionally had instrumental and/or structural power to defend their interests. In Bolivia, popular mobilization counterbalanced the power of economic elites, who were much stronger than in Argentina but weaker than in Chile. The book’s in-depth, medium-N case analysis and close attention to policymaking processes contribute insights on business power and prospects for redistribution in unequal democracies. Buy it on Amazon.

Publication Details

Title
Private Wealth and Public Revenue in Latin America: Business Power and Tax Politics
Authors
Fairfield, Tasha Ann
Publisher
University of Cambridge / Cambridge University Press
Publish Date
March 2015
ISBN
978-1107088375
Citation
Fairfield, Tasha Ann, Private Wealth and Public Revenue in Latin America: Business Power and Tax Politics (University of Cambridge / Cambridge University Press, March 2015).
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