04/04/2009
Towards a fair and true list of harmful havens
The OECD list that was published the day before yesterday is neither fair nor true.
It is not fair as it stigmatise some jurisdictions on a grey list while condoning the US Tax Havens like Delaware, but it is true that the USA are the major contributor to the OECD budget and condone as well the US tax havens on the Stop Tax Havens Abuse Act.
It is not true as it does not take into account every parameter. As I wrote, harmful tax practices, corruption, money laundering… are definitely connected and must me assessed on a unique list as a whole. Furthermore it is inconsistent as the split of the grey list is not coherent: How a jurisdiction like Cayman Islands that signed 8 agreements or Netherlands Antilles, Antigua and Barbuda that signed 7 can be considered as tax havens while Austria, Chile, Guatemala , Luxembourg, Singapore, Switzerland that signed none are only “Financial Centers”.
The OECD criteria are a charade. Quod erat demonstrandum.
As observes a contact of mine, time is up to propose a world wide list with at least 4 categories of information used to calculate a "cleanliness" index from 0-100:
1. Combination of Banking secrecy, harmful tax practices and offshore abuse, rated out of 25.
2. TI Barometer, rated out of 25. As far as the CPI is concerned, CPI TI should review the CPI as the latest list was demonstrated that the methodology is not consistent with observed facts: http://taxjustice.blogspot.com/2008/09/backsliding-from-transparency.html
3. International provisions enacted in the positive law, rated out of 25: enevry AML provision (from the FATF), every anticorruption provision (from the OECD), every tax provision (from the OECD)...
4. Laxism (judicial haven), rated out of 25: absence of a legal framework, absence of credible enforcement, absence of credible sanctions, passive corruption through influence, poor means for the FIU, regulatory not independent enough from the business...
In those 4 issues only objective parameters should be taken into account: figures, number of cases, CTR filings, highest sanction, number of sanctions… Ratios should be used as well (cf. my comparison Monaco v. Luxembourg despite both jurisdictions are on the grey list) as numbers must be weighted according to the importance of assets under control.
For Unions, Confederations and other multi jurisdictional states, the weakest link in the chain would give the country's final grade. For Switzerland it may be Zug, Delaware for the US, Andorra for France, Hong Kong for China...
The result would be surprising: many jurisdictions on the OECD white list would be under 50.
As I said, I am afraid the OECD is unable to do the job as it is not independent and the list provided the day before yesterday demonstrated that unfortunately politics drive policies.
Only an independent body (NGO for example) can do it.
08:25 Posted in General | Permalink | Comments (0)
04/03/2009
The sword of Damoclès
The OECD has defined its blacklist of non-cooperative tax havens : Costa Rica, Malaysia, the Philippines and Uruguay.
A separate "grey list" of countries that have agreed to improve transparency standards but have not yet signed the every necessary international agreements : this list is split : on the one hand "Tax havens" and on the other hand "Other financial centers"
Austria, Belgium, Luxembourg and Switzerland are not on the tax haven grey list as they recently withdrew their reservations to Article 26 of the OECD Model Tax Convention. Belgium has already written to 48 countries to propose the conclusion of protocols to update Article 26 of their existing treaties. Austria, Luxembourg and Switzerland announced that they have started to write to their treaty partners to indicate that they are now willing to enter into renegotiations of their treaties to include the new Article 26.
Should one of these jurisdiction not respect its commitments in the next couple of weeks it should move to the tax haven list.
Read OECD lists
07:04 Posted in General | Permalink | Comments (0)
03/31/2009
Courage or thoughtlessness (update)
The AFP reported that Prime Minister Juncker attacked the USA by saying "The G20 has no credibility as an undertaking if Delaware, Wyoming or Nevada or far-flung islands from the United States are not on the blacklist. If there must be a blacklist then, America should have its place on it."
It is true that the USA have their own tax havens that are not targetted by the Stop tax haven Abused Act. They definitely should be.
But Prime Minister Juncker forgets that his jurisdiction is not so targetted by the USA : it was not under the US Senate investigation on tax havens.
By acting like that Prime Minister Juncker could incitate the USA to investigate on the Luxembourg issues :
- Clearstream,
- the small number of criminal cases before the courts that is said "telling" for a jurisdiction that has such a large financial center (See the Narcotics Control Strategy Reports of the last years)
- ...
By the way, Minister Frieden ("peace" in german) went to the USA a couple of days ago.
By attacking now the USA Prime Minister Juncker reveals the weakness of Luxembourg as American people were not convinced.
17:25 Posted in Luxembourg | Permalink | Comments (0)