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09/20/2009

Monaco to be taken off Gurria's tax secrecy 'grey list'

Monaco is to be removed from an OECD "grey list" when it signs a fresh round of international tax agreements on Monday, the Telegraph reported.

As Oxfam, a French NGO, commented, this perspective sounds like a farce. Offam has the same reserves as the Global Forum on Transparency and Exchange of Information.

Tax agreement were signed with jurisdictions that are said to be havens : Andorra, Austria, the Bahamas, Belgium, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Qatar, Samoa, San Marino, Saint Kitts.

I am looking forward to reading the OECD press release that should look like the following (adapted from the PR for Luxembourg) :

The Progress Report initially published by the OECD Secretariat on 2 April 2009 in conjunction with the G20 has been updated, and Monaco moves into the category of “Jurisdictions that have  substantially implemented the internationally agreed tax standard.”

Having withdrawn its reservation to the OECD standard on exchange of information in March 2009, Monaco has shown rapid progress in updating its treaty network. Further negotiations are under way to update the exchange of information provisions in Monaco’s bilateral treaties.

Welcoming the recent signings, OECD Secretary-General Angel Gurría said: “I commend Monaco for its swift implementation of the OECD standards on exchange of information. In a couple of months, Monaco has turned into reality its commitment to fully cooperate in tax matters. I would like to congratulate Frank Biancheri for his leadership in this process”.

Monaco is thus contributing to strengthen the very important process of transparency around the world, where dozens of other agreements are being signed by different jurisdictions.

Mr. Gurría added that the Monaco government had informed him me that in line with the spirit and purpose of this collective effort they intend to continue the process of negotiating agreements which meet the OECD standard.

 

Angel Gurria is happy, the OECD is happy, governments in these jurisdictions are happy, bankers are happy....

 

I must be a fault finder...

 

09:03 Posted in Monaco | Permalink | Comments (0)

09/19/2009

Tax havens may face higher barrier to 'white list' status

Bob Reynolds has reported in Accountancy Age that offshore financial centres will face renewed pressure in their bid to achieve and retain “white list” status for tax compliance, after a meeting of global heads.

Financial regulators gathered to debate the future standards for admission to the tax transparency compliance list, the scope of peer reviews for these countries, and the nature of fiscal sanctions to be applied to the non-compliant.

Owens said that the barrier would be set higher for jurisdictions but the focus would be on the quality of compliance, not on numbers.

Know more

 

06:14 Posted in General | Permalink | Comments (0)

09/17/2009

Communicating vases

Whereas traditional tax havens are monitored, a new tax haven created by the West African state of Ghana could attract tax dodgers and drug traders seeking to launder money unless safeguards are introduced, warns a report launched a couple of days ago.

The report, Taxation and Development in Ghana, co-funded by Christian Aid Ghana, says the potential detrimental effects of the International Financial Services Centre (IFSC) could be felt across the region. The centre has been set up with the help of Barclays bank.

"The risk of illicit funds finding their way into the offshore financial centre is particularly acute given the extensive cocaine trade in the country and the massive flows from oil that are expected in the near future," says the report. Large oilfields were recently discovered off Ghana’s coast.

 

Read report

06:14 Posted in Gibraltar | Permalink | Comments (0)