Technologies of the self' and some Contradictions of the Enabling State: The Case of Tax Effective Schemes in Australia
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Australian National University. Regulatory Institutions Network
Hobson, Kersty
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The Australian National University, Regulatory Institutions Network (RegNet)
Abstract
The role of the state has been reshaped in recent years by substantive economic and
political internationalisation processes, making it replete with inherent contradictions or
tensions. The aim of this paper is to consider, if this is the case, are these tensions visible
‘on the ground’ and if so, how do they affect citizens? The story of ‘tax effective schemes’
in Australia provides a pertinent example. Here, approximately 40 000 individuals made
tax-related investments in the mid-1990s, which were subsequently ruled to contravene tax
law. Affected investors have responded by arguing they were trying to do as the Coalition
government has increasingly requested - provision their family’s future economic security.
Yet, inherent systemic tensions made carrying out this task within the bounds of the law
problematic. For one the system of tax administration in Australia - here discussed through
the Foucauldian concept of technology of the self’ – requires individuals to be wholly
responsible for practices and knowledge over which they have little control or access. As a
result, many investors who aimed to heed the self-provisioning call are now facing
bankruptcy and the state response has been to call for more regulation to be introduced into
the market place, thus perpetuating and intensifying the already present tensions.
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This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
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