The #PanamaPapers: Five things the world can do about it

Well, there are more than five things, but let’s start with these, from easier actions to ones that will prove to be trickier:

1) Invest and collect: governments around the world have been cutting back on their tax authorities. But before the Panama Papers scandal broke Canada announced it was joining the 21st century in the fight against tax dodging by beefing up the Canada Revenue Agency’s capacity to tackle tax havens. They’re investing hundreds of millions and estimate they’ll reap C$10 billion from their investment. It’s not rocket science…

2) Politicians must publish their tax returns: given the number of political elites implicated so far in the Panama Papers, this can’t come soon enough. Politicians don’t need to wait around. They could publish their tax returns today. Parliamentarians in Pakistan have been publishing their tax returns for years now – so isn’t it time the rest of the world followed? (we covered Pakistan’s move on the tax returns of their politicians in our podcast, the Taxcast)

 
3) Stop the importing of Panamanian-style secrecy into ‘cleaner’ jurisdictions through a black list which refuses company registrations where an entity, shareholder, general limited partner or partners are based in jurisdictions with unacceptable levels of secrecy, as we discuss in this podcast.

 
4) All countries must implement a public register of beneficial owners of offshore companies, trusts and foundations. The UK has a particular duty to take the lead here: if we added together all its Crown Dependencies and Overseas Territories it would be the number 1 biggest global player in secrecy in our Financial Secrecy Index. The British Virgin Islands was revealed in the Panama Papers as a Mossack Fonseca favourite. These UK satellite havens have so far been fairly unresponsive to PM Cameron’s polite requests to deliver on registries. The UK government can put its foot down here and even impose direct rule if they refuse to comply. The UK did this before to tackle corruption in the Turks and Caicos Islands in 2009. They can do it again.

 
5) Impose withholding taxes on rogue countries refusing to comply or cooperate with the sharing of data. We found the United States to be the jurisdiction of greatest concern in our latest Financial Secrecy Index. While it demands data on its own citizens overseas, it’s not so keen to reciprocate that data and in fact it is booming as the tax haven of choice for foreigners. Almost 100 countries have signed up to reciprocal automatic exchange of information. But not the United States. Clearly the carrot’s not working and we need a stick. It’s time to introduce a levy on payments originating in the EU that flow through US banks. We think a 35% withholding penalty tax is fair for anyone who’s not willing to fully reciprocate their data.

Why Infantino’s claims he did nothing wrong are wrong

x

Cross-posted from our partner website The Offshore Game

Infantino’s involvement in a dodgy deal over Champion’s league TV rights are no proof of corruption, but at a minimum they are proof that he is completely unfit to lead FIFA into a new era of transparency and accountability.

Continue reading “Why Infantino’s claims he did nothing wrong are wrong”

Majority of British public want David Cameron to act on the tax havens, poll shows

Global_Witness_official_logoFrom our partners at Global Witness, published this morning

A ComRes poll commissioned by Christian Aid and Global Witness and carried out immediately before [1] the Panama Papers exposé broke found overwhelming support among Brits for UK government action on the UK’s tax havens – its ‘Overseas Territories’. Continue reading “Majority of British public want David Cameron to act on the tax havens, poll shows”

The Panama Papers: the enablers of financial secrecy know what they are doing

global logo - square version NOV 2005

Press Release:  Tax Justice Network

The  enablers  of  financial  secrecy  know  what  they are  doing

Continue reading “The Panama Papers: the enablers of financial secrecy know what they are doing”

The Panama papers – in case you missed it

The big offshore story of the moment is a new leak of 11 million documents from the Panama law firm Mossack Fonseca. The leak was originally to the German newspaper Süddeutsche Zeitung, was shared with the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, and involves over 100 news organisations from around the world. This is the biggest offshore data leak in history (by far): 2.6 terabytes of data were involved.

TJNers have been commenting to various media, though we weren’t involved in the leak.

Panama ICIJ

As Süddeutsche put it:

“A look through the Panama Papers very quickly reveals that concealing the identities of the true company owners was the primary aim in the vast majority of cases.
. . .
Among others, Mossack Fonsecas’ clients include criminals and members of various Mafia groups. The documents also expose bribery scandals and corrupt heads of state and government. The alleged offshore companies of twelve current and former heads of state make up one of the most spectacular parts of the leak, as do the links to other leaders, and to their families, closest advisors, and friends. The Panamanian law firm also counts almost 200 other politicians from around the globe among its clients, including a number of ministers.

And, as we reminded readers last week, we have a history of how Panama became a tax haven.

Now, for the Panama leaks story, read on.

Guest blog: how the European Trade secrets Directive will silence tax whistleblowers

WhistleblowersFrom Corporate Observatory Europe, the basic background for our guest blog:

“The proposed EU legislation on “Trade Secrets Protection”, which the European Parliament will vote next April 14, creates excessive rights to secrecy for businesses: it is a direct threat to the work of journalists and their sources, whistleblowers, employees’ freedom of expression, and rights to access public interest information.”

Now Antonio Gambini of CNCD 11.11.11, a Brussels-based network focusing on globalisation, has written a guest blog for TJN, outlining the issues in stark detail. He looks at the general wide relevance of the directive, which is almost but not quite set in stone – then he looks to see how it would affect tax whistleblowers such as Antoine Deltour, the so-called “Luxleaks” whistleblower.  Read Antonio’s blog below and sign the petition Continue reading “Guest blog: how the European Trade secrets Directive will silence tax whistleblowers”

Panama: the making of a tax haven and rogue state

Source: APIntertrust Corp

         Source: APIntertrust Corp

Panama is attracting much media attention at the moment, and for good reason.  Earlier this month we blogged on a BBC Hard Talk interview with Panama’s Vice President which referred to our comment that Panama gives “the middle finger” to the rest of the world when it comes to tackling financial crimes.  Continue reading “Panama: the making of a tax haven and rogue state”

Take action to back corporate transparency in Europe

endeusecrecyUpdate: see the report in The Guardian here; see Alex Cobham’s mode detailed analysis of the failures of what’s being proposed, here.

We’ve been campaigning on so-called country by country reporting since 2003, and now world leaders, and many others, are beginning to introduce changes to bring this basic transparency measure for multinational corporations to life.  The website endsecrecy.eu has a new campaign to try and put pressure on European leaders to make sure that proposed changes are not eviscerated by corporate lobbyists keen to preserve financial secrecy for their corporate clients. Endsecrecy.eu offers pointers for you to act now to support this measure. As they say: Continue reading “Take action to back corporate transparency in Europe”

The Tax Justice Network March 2016 Podcast

In this month’s podcast: Is the US president really serious about tackling corruption in the finance sector? Are the presidential candidates? Now they can prove it. William Black of Bank Whistleblowers United tells us how they can restore the rule of law to Wall Street and avoid the next financial crisis in 60 days without any new legislation. Plus: why a wave of tax amnesties is likely to sweep across the world (how does 1% tax and immunity from prosecution sound?) and what the very first transparency data on banks exposes about how they do business. Produced and presented by Naomi Fowler for the Tax Justice Network.

“it doesn’t matter what the rules are if you put people in charge who are committed to not enforcing the rules…not a single banking leader of the three fraud epidemics that drove the US financial crisis and much of the global financial crisis has been prosecuted for leading those fraud schemes, not one.”

William Black, Bank Whistleblowers United (serial whistleblower, former senior US regulator, white collar criminologist and Associate Professor of Law and Economics)

Featuring: John Christensen of the Tax Justice Network and serial whistleblower, former senior US regulator, white collar criminologist and Associate Professor of Law and Economics William Black.

Mentioned this month in the Taxcast: Democracy Spring, a mass nonviolent action on a historic scale ‘to save US democracy’ in April 2016, Washington DC. Follow them on Twitter

The Tax Justice Network’s monthly podcast the Taxcast is available here, here and on iTunes

You can subscribe to the Taxcast via our youtube channel or by emailing naomi [at] taxjustice. net and our RSS feed is here

Edmond Tavernier, Swiss tax lawyer, reveals how a little learning is still a dangerous thing

xThis blogger has just been reading an article about tax competition in the Swiss Bilan magazine citing tax laywer Edmond Tavernier (who, BTW, has the dubious distinction of representing Lillian Bettencourt and Jérôme Cazuhac in their respective cases). Continue reading “Edmond Tavernier, Swiss tax lawyer, reveals how a little learning is still a dangerous thing”

The inexorable approach of public country-by-country reporting

Photo by Harald Groven, https://www.flickr.com/photos/kongharald/

The full publication of multinational companies’ country-by-country reporting took a step closer today. A begrudging step, which as it stands would negate most of the benefits; but an important one nonetheless, because of the direction of travel.

A long road travelled

A little background. Public CBCR, as proposed by Richard Murphy and John Christensen for TJN way back in 2003, is a tool for accountability:

After ten years of building the case for public CBCR – including the crucial support of international development NGOs such as Christian Aid and ActionAid and our partners in the Financial Transparency Coalition, and the emergence of a global network of civil society organisations, the Global Alliance for Tax Justice – success! The G8 and G20 groups of countries mandated the OECD to produce a standard as part of the international tax rules.

Private CBCR: A measure for tax injustice

Then, a setback: aggressive lobbying led to the OECD taking its broadly robust standard  and making it as unhelpful for accountability as possible. Specifically, the decision was taken to make the reporting private to tax authorities – at a stroke, eliminating all the accountability benefits with the exception of multinational accountability to tax authorities. (This, of course, is the accountability that was by far the strongest beforehand, since tax authorities could already demand very substantial additional information from corporate taxpayers; and hence the benefit arising is likely to be the smallest).

This move also reversed the development direction. Among tax authorities, public CBCR would disproportionately benefit those which are:

  1. politically least able to demand information, i.e. those from lower-income countries; and
  2. technically least able to resource long, technical battles over transfer pricing and other elements of the international rules where tax manipulation is common, i.e. those from lower-income countries.

As such, public CBCR is a measure that challenges the major inequality in the global distribution of taxing rights – an inequality that means the resulting tax losses may be several times larger as a proportion of existing revenues in non-OECD countries, on the basis of IMF research findings.

The OECD reversal was exacerbated by a decision that reporting would only be provided to headquarters country tax authorities, i.e. overwhelmingly to those in OECD countries and not elsewhere. This necessitated the development of resource-consuming, additional instruments to provide that information to other tax authorities; along with various criteria to exclude those that might have the temerity to make the data public, or to use it for non-OECD-approved tax approaches.

At this stage, then, the overall effect has been to worsen rather than to curtail the global inequality of taxing rights – exactly the opposite of what public CBCR would ensure.

Leaked European Commission proposals

Unsurprisingly, the policy discussion now centres on delivering TJN’s original proposal, and making CBCR public – with the expressed support of various European Commission officials and of UK Chancellor George Osborne. The compliance costs are now locked in for companies, and there would likely be an overall cost saving from switching to open data publishing, so that counter-argument has long gone.

Today, European Commission documents leaked to Politico and to the Financial Times show a step in this direction. The FT (£) summed up the main flaw:

In a significant disappointment for tax-justice campaigners, the scope of the disclosure rules will be limited to activities within Europe, leaving a lack of transparency on profit shifting to non-EU tax havens such as the Cayman Islands and Bermuda.

As Richard Murphy pointed out directly, this is not country-by-country reporting. It’s not only that we don’t see the likes of Bermuda; we also lose all developing countries too, and instead get a single number capturing both. Rolling together the jurisdictions where profit is likely to be shifted to, with those where profit stripping may be most egregious, is of course to negate the entire point of CBCR – which is to understand the disaggregated distributional picture.

As it stands, the proposal would support accountability of European tax authorities for LuxLeaks-type abuses – that is, it would make clear where EU members were receiving much higher shares of profit and/or tax than activity. To an extent, it would support accountability for authorities in terms of their obtaining a fair share of multinationals’ global tax base (albeit without explaining the full picture extra-EU). It would provide only limited accountability for multinationals, since the bulk of their inward and outward profit-shifting might well be hidden.

What the proposal would dramatically fail to deliver is any direct benefit for developing countries. Since their information would not be disaggregated, there would likely be little more value than from what is currently possible by comparing national tax returns with consolidated global accounts of the taxpayer’s group – except, perhaps, where the Commission proposal might reveal a particular jurisdiction risk relating to an EU member state (e.g. seeing the global scale of profit-shifting into the Netherlands might help the Ghanaian revenue authority to focus on particular transactions). Indirectly, the proposals might allow developing countries more space to pursue their own public CBCR approach; but at the risk of locking in the same weaknesses.

In addition, the proposal would fail to identify or support accountability for any non-EU profit havens – with the potential effect that their share of global shifted profits would actually increase. The Commission would be creating, deliberately, a playing field unbalanced against their own member states.

Rubbish proposals – rejoice!

Overall, then, the leaked proposals seem to fail when assessed against any realistic aims. They do not deliver full accountability within the EU; they disadvantage member states against others, to the extent that overall profit-shifting and tax losses may not be reduced; and they deliver nothing for developing countries.

The proposals are, in short, a clear step back from the European Parliament’s support for a fully global approach. The most obvious improvement would be to require public reporting by all multinationals operating in the EU, regardless of the location of their headquarters.

And yet the proposals remain a step in the right direction. The only discussion is about how to make CBCR public; not whether to. Given the heavy lobbying against the OECD standard – to say nothing of the ten years that it took us to bring the measure to the top of the global policy agenda – it was to be expected that there would be some bad proposals for public CBCR. And the leaked Commission document is certainly one!

More work is clearly needed to educate policymakers and their technical advisers on the specific benefits of public CBCR, in order to inform a more sensible set of proposals. (Not least in the US.) And it may be that some jurisdictions pursue bad proposals before others (and perhaps some forward-thinking multinationals) lead the way with good ones. But we are on the road, inexorably, to the global delivery of TJN’s first policy proposal: public CBCR and all the accountability benefits.

The Commission’s proposal is rubbish – let us rejoice.

Photo by Harald Groven, https://www.flickr.com/photos/kongharald/

Photo by Harald Groven, https://www.flickr.com/photos/kongharald/

Does Trump belong to an offshore company?

An offshore brand?

An offshore brand?

Good question.  Continue reading “Does Trump belong to an offshore company?”

Why is the CEO of IKEA Switzerland head of a UN panel on gender?

Simona Scarpaleggia, CEO of IKEA Switzerland

Simona Scarpaleggia, CEO of IKEA Switzerland

On March the UN Secretary-General’s High-Level Panel on Women’s Economic Empowerment held their inaugural meetingThe panel:

intends to put women’s economic empowerment at the top of the international agenda, including by defining actions to speed up progress under the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.” 

Gender responses and gender impact are clearly seen as key ways to anchor the success of the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals. And we’re pleased that this is happening. But there is a jarring note. Continue reading “Why is the CEO of IKEA Switzerland head of a UN panel on gender?”

Scottish Government announces historic law to end secrecy of land ownership

This topic has been building slowly in some countries, whose economies are blighted by the fact that large tracts of real estate are owned by anonymous entities and arrangements, typically linked to tax havens. We’d highlight Private Eye’s searchable database of offshore-owned properties in the UK — and in this particular case the indefatigable Scottish land and transparency campaigner Andy Wightman. His latest blog begins like this: Continue reading “Scottish Government announces historic law to end secrecy of land ownership”

Indonesia’s corrupt tax amnesty – how many will follow?

imageFrom Reuters:

“Business may be about to look up for the [wealth management] industry helped by President Joko Widodo’s tax amnesty plan that could encourage rich Indonesians to declare assets previously concealed from the authorities, either at home or abroad.”

So Indonesia is contemplating a tax amnesty. It’s not in place yet, but some sort of announcement is expected next month.

We generally take a very dim view of tax amnesties – they are short term palliatives that come at the expense of much larger long-term revenues, and they severely damage democracy, creating a sense that there is one rule for the rich and powerful, and another rule for everyone else.

More importantly, perhaps, we fear that this is a canary in the coalmine as the world’s élites start to rebel against an approaching era of greater transparency. Continue reading “Indonesia’s corrupt tax amnesty – how many will follow?”

Following the Money: French Banks’ Activities in Tax Havens

ParadisUpdate: the English version is coming soon; the French version is here

The following press release is published by Oxfam France; CCFD-Terre Solidaire; and Secours Catholique-Caritas. The accompanying study uses the first fully available public Country-by-Country reporting data from French banks following the implementation of CRD IV, the piece of EU legislation requiring banks to disclose this information. It shows that banks in France are relying heavily on tax havens to increase their profits — and there is some interesting data in there.

The European Commission is about to publish its impact assessment and proposal for public Country by Country Reporting (CbCR) at EU level.  Concerns about so-called “competitiveness” could water down the EC proposal, but this piece of work shows that public CbCR is a useful tool which has not harmed banks in France or the EU.

The main recommendation at the EU level is to call for the extension of public CbCR to all sectors. Continue reading “Following the Money: French Banks’ Activities in Tax Havens”

KPMG: are they really masters of the universe?

A guest blog by Atul Shah of Suffolk Business School. Also published at Tax Research.

Are KPMG really masters of the universe?

The growing size and influence of Big 4 global accounting firms, and their supermarket of business consulting and advisory services, is generating alarm among scholars concerned about ethics, independence, and truth. Our research at Suffolk Business School has raised a number of questions about their ethics, conflicts of interest and culture. There is confusion as to whether they are a regulator of business, or help business escape regulatory control through skilled professional services – the primary driver seems to be maximising profit. We also found high level corporate and political networks and influence on government and regulatory processes. Continue reading “KPMG: are they really masters of the universe?”

The Multinational Enterprises (Financial Transparency) Bill

Caroline Flint

Caroline Flint

From the UK parliament, a motion that we noted in our previous blog on Oxfam’s new UK tax havens report, and which we strongly support:

Multinational Enterprises (Financial Transparency): Ten Minute Rule Motion

Caroline Flint

That leave be given to bring in a Bill to require certain multinational enterprises to include, within their annual financial reporting, specified information prepared in accordance with the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development’s requirements for Country-by-Country reporting; and for connected purposes.

A letter from Caroline Flint to the UK Chancellor (Finance Minister) is available here. Her press release is below. Continue reading “The Multinational Enterprises (Financial Transparency) Bill”

Oxfam report: Ending the Era of Tax Havens

Oxfam wealthBack in June 2000, three years before TJN’s birth and at a time when nobody was talking about the issues, the charity Oxfam published a seminal document entitled Tax Havens: Releasing the hidden billions for poverty eradication.  It was an important part of global tax justice history. We’re delighted that Oxfam has again been extremely active in the area, and now has produced an important, in-depth new report entitled Ending the Era of Tax Havens: Why the UK Government Must Lead the Way, written with the help of TJN’s research Director Alex Cobham.

It begins: Continue reading “Oxfam report: Ending the Era of Tax Havens”

Our corruption and tax havens workshop: new programme

We’ve updated the programme for our Corruption and Tax Havens workshop at City University, London, on April 28th and 29th. Great sessions in prospect including papers on the corruption driven by the UK’s financial secrecy network, on gender and human rights impacts, and on the role of professionals including the big four accounting firms.

You can find the programme here, and embedded below. Oh, and don’t forget to register if you’re going to join us.

[embeddoc url=”https://www.taxjustice.net/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/City-2016-core-programme-March-28-29-APR-2016.pdf”]

Top rate income tax cuts: 89 percent go to men, 11 percent to women

Women tax cuts

Sharing out the proposed tax cut from 45 to 40 percent

From The UK’s Mirror newspaper:

“If George Osborne [the UK Finance Minister] slashes the rate further in the Budget – from 45p to 40p for those on £150,000 or more – will put even more money in men’s pockets.

Analysis by the Tax Justice Network found there are 339,000 people (284,000 men and 55,000 women) earning above that level.

Cutting the rate to 40p would be worth £3.3billion to high-earning men (89%) but just £428million to wealthy women (11%)”

(Hat tip to Jolyon Maugham for that 339,000 figure, of which 83.8% are men.) We recently explained how a proposed cut to the UK top rate of income tax from 45 percent to 50 percent (for incomes over £150,000) would see 83.8 percent of the tax cut going directly to men, and 16.2 percent to women.

That’s counting the number of taxpayers affected. But now let’s ask how much of the £ value of this tax cut would go to women.

Continue reading “Top rate income tax cuts: 89 percent go to men, 11 percent to women”

Why tax ‘competitiveness’ is like ice cream

Only spoilsports could be against this

Only spoilsports are against it

From the Fools’ Gold blog:

One of the core arguments of our Fool’s Gold project is that if you shower wealthy people and large corporations with goodies, two things happen.

First, you may help them and you may be able to demonstrate some benefits, somewhere in the economy: such as improved performance for the stock options held by the executives at the multinationals concerned.

Second, though, there is the annoying snag that those benefits entail costs elsewhere in your economy.

Someone has to pay for these goodies! Who will it be?

Continue reading “Why tax ‘competitiveness’ is like ice cream”