Summary: | One of the key features of today’s global economy is an “offshore world” of financial structures,
institutions and techniques designed to provide secrecy, asset protection and tax exemption. While its
worldwide impact is very significant, Africa is affected to an unusual extent by the strategies of tax
avoidance/evasion, outward financial flows (both legal and illegal) and corruption enabled by the
offshore world. This is corroborated by a number of quantitative studies of capital flight as well as by
influential investigations such as the Pandora Papers, Panama Papers and Luanda Leaks. The offshore
world’s limited presence in the study of contemporary African politics, political economy and
international relations is therefore striking. The purpose of this exploratory paper is to highlight this
gap, provide a preliminary analysis, and suggest that the politics of African insertion in the global
offshore economy merits more attention from scholars of African politics.
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