01505pab a2200169 454500008004000000100001800040245008100058260000900139300001400148520099800162650001201160773002601172908000601198909001001204999001701214952010401231180718b2009 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aSharman, J.C. aPrivacy as roguery: personal financial information in an age of transparency c2009 ap.717-31. aA fundamental shift has occurred in the relationship between the state and the individual regarding financial privacy. The onus is now on citizens to show why governments should not have access to their personal financial information, rather than governments having to show why they should. This article argues that this shift has come about in large part because of the activities of autonomous and influential transnational networks of regulators. These regulatory networks have systematically favoured administrative efficiency and transparency at the expense of privacy in designing responses to financial crimes. Evidence is drawn from an examination of recent policy developments in countering tax evasion, money laundering, and the financing of terrorism. Currently, the principle of financial transparency suggests that financial privacy inhibits the fight against criminals and terrorists; by extension, asserting a right to privacy indicates some kind of roguery afoot. - Reproduced. aFinance aPublic Administration aN a85407 c85407d85407 00104070aIIPAbIIPAd2018-07-19hVolume no: 87, Issue no: 4pAR85867r2018-07-19w2018-07-19yAR