Archive for the ‘Tax Havens’ Category

Indians have '$500 bn stashed in tax havens'

Rich Indians have stashed away almost $500 billion of illicit money abroad, parking the funds in countries considered the "least corrupt", the country's top police agency said on Monday.

The issue of so-called "black money" has been a major political headache for India's government, which has faced pressure from corruption activists and political opponents to do more to claw back money held abroad.

"It is estimated that around $500 billion of illegal money belonging to Indians is deposited in tax havens abroad," A.P. Singh, director of the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), told an Interpol conference in New Delhi.

Singh said the countries rated as least corrupt by Transparency International, a global anti-graft watchdog, turned out to be the ones where "most of the corrupt money goes".

"The tax havens include New Zealand, which is ranked as the least corrupt country, Singapore ranked number five and Switzerland number seven," he said, according to the Press Trust of India.

The CBI chief said that international agreements and other legal hurdles prevented the Indian government from exposing the identity of the tax evaders and bringing the wealth back to the country.

"There are many obstacles to asset recovery. Not only is it a specialised legal process filled with delays and uncertainty, but there are also language barriers and a lack of trust when working with other countries," Singh said.

Heaping further embarrassment on the beleaguered Congress-led government, India's Supreme Court last year accused it of being reluctant to publish details about untaxed money held in overseas bank accounts.

Singh said criminals were using territorial restrictions of investigating agencies to their advantage and spreading their crime to at least two countries before investing in a third.

"For criminals all it involves is setting up of a few shell companies and then making layered transfers from account to another in a matter of hours as there are no boundaries in banking transactions," he said.

The World Bank pegs the cross-border flow of money from criminal activities and tax evasion at around $1.5 trillion, of which $40 billion is in bribes paid to government servants in developing countries, according to Singh.

ASSOCHAM, a prominent Indian trade body and think-tank, recently suggested that the government provide a window to tax evaders to disclose their assets parked abroad in exchange for amnesty.

Those making such disclosures would have to pay half the amount as taxes to the Indian government.

"The fact remains that as on date it may not be possible to get hold of these persons who have stashed money abroad that is why the scheme is an invitation to these people to come forward and pay taxes," it said in a report.

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Indians have '$500 bn stashed in tax havens'

Tax evasion 'cost India $500bn'

13 February 2012 Last updated at 10:27 ET

The chief of India's federal investigation agency says Indians have illegally deposited an estimated $500bn in overseas tax havens.

Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) director AP Singh said Indians were the largest depositors in foreign banks.

Funds were being sent to tax havens such as Mauritius, Switzerland, Lichtenstein and the British Virgin Islands among others, he said.

Analysts say this flight of capital has helped widen inequality in India.

Mr Singh was speaking at the opening on Monday of the first Interpol global programme on anti-corruption and asset recovery in the Indian capital, Delhi.

"It is estimated that around $500bn of illegal money belonging to Indians is deposited in tax havens abroad. [The] largest depositors in Swiss Banks are also reported to be Indians," The Press Trust of India (PTI) quoted him as saying.

Mr Singh said getting information about such illegal transactions was a time-consuming and expensive process as each country where money had been sent had to be approached for help with investigations.

He said there was a lack of political will in the tax havens to part with any information because they were aware of the extent to which their economies had become "geared to this flow of illegal capitals from the poorer countries", PTI reported.

In a report in November 2010 the US-based group, Global Financial Integrity, said India had lost more than $460bn between 1948, a year after Independence, and 2008 because of companies and the rich illegally funnelling their wealth overseas.

India's underground economy accounted for 50% of the country's gross domestic product, it said.

The report said the illicit outflows of money had increased after economic reforms began in 1991.

In recent months, India's Congress party-led government has been on the back foot on the issue of black money and corruption.

The Supreme Court has also chided the government for not doing enough to unearth illicit money.

Originally posted here:
Tax evasion 'cost India $500bn'

A judgment ahead of our times!

A judgment ahead of our times! M R Venkatesh / Feb 13, 2012, 00:06 IST

The Vodafone judgment delivered by the Supreme Court in January, 2012, has set the cat amongst the pigeons. At a macro level it has the calculated effect of implicitly legitimizing tax havens, weakens our cause against illicit wealth parked abroad and explicitly sanctions corporate structures that use tax havens primarily as a tax avoidance measure.

Idea of look at
Central to the argument of the Supreme Court, has been the principle of “Look at” in the Westminster case as propounded by the English Courts in 1930’s wherein it was held “given that a document or transaction is genuine, the court cannot go behind it to some supposed underlying substance.” The Supreme Court holds this to be a cardinal principle to this date in India.

To amplify, the “Look at” principle presumably implies the courts need not be too concerned with the substance but only with the form of a transaction. That has extraordinary implications for the government as a whole in the immediate future.

Subsequent to Westminster, even in Britain, attempts were made to re-look at the entire issue by the English courts in the Ramsay and Dawson cases where the courts sought to overturn the “Look At” principle.

The Courts in Ramsay held “To force the courts to adopt, in relation to closely integrated situations, a step by step, dissecting, approach which the parties themselves may have negated, would be a denial rather than an affirmation of the true judicial process. In each case the facts must be established, and a legal analysis made: legislation cannot be required or even be desirable to enable the courts to arrive at a conclusion which corresponds with the parties’ own intentions.”

The ultimate question that the courts repeatedly ask in such circumstances is whether the relevant statutory provisions, construed purposively, were realistically applied to the transaction.

It may not be out of place to mention that the Irish Court as late as in December, 2011, in Revenue Commissioners vs O’Flynn Constructions & Others had an opportunity to deal with the extant subject. O’Donnell J noted that in Ramsay and Dawson, the courts took a novel approach on the issue of tax avoidance “without reversing or appearing to question the decision in Westminster case.” And that is the crux of the issue.

Alien country; different times
What is equally worrying is that a legal proposition held in an alien country when it was a colonial power has been extrapolated into interpretation of tax laws of a sovereign country in entirely different times, especially when it involves convoluted transactions routed through tax havens. It is in this connection, citing another decision by the Ireland Supreme Court in the case of McGrath vs McDermott, the same court refused to consider the judicial development in the common law of another country. This pronouncement is equally important for the “independent” development of jurisprudence in our country.

Even in India, judicial developments suggests that we were moving out of the Westminster Principle as exemplified by the McDowell case where the Supreme Court frowned on every scheme of tax avoidance. From then on, the courts both in India and abroad, as matter of principle looked through a transaction instead of merely looking at one. What is indeed worrying now is that The Vodafone judgment overturns the well-settled principle of looked through and revives, nay exhumes, the outdated principle of “Look At.”

Naturally, the issues relating to Vodafone are smaller order of smalls. At the root of the present consternation is the idea of “Looked At” embedded in the CBDT circular in the Azadi Bachao Andolan case, which the Supreme Court has heavily relied in the instant case. It is also submitted that the stand of the department is morally nonexistent against Vodafone, as long as Circular No 789 issued by the CBDT continues to occupy our statute books.

It may not be out of place to mention that the question uppermost in the minds of the courts was whether the sale of a single share of CGP – a company in Cayman Islands - and “shoved” into the entire deal at the proverbial eleventh hour consummated in Hutch becoming Vodafone in India. Why Cayman Islands? The answer to that question is obvious as Cayman Island is a tax haven. No wonder, by choosing Cayman Island as a structure, the deal sanctified the idea of “Double Non-Taxation.”

Holding – subsidiary relationship
There is another dimension central to the debate on hand. The judgment re-writes some fundamental assumptions in corporate laws. Introducing the theory of puppets in the context of relationship between a holding company and its subsidiaries, it concludes that the directors of the subsidiaries cannot be held to be mere “puppets” of a holding company.

The judgment further opines that subsidiaries of multinational companies “have great deal autonomy in the country concerned except where subsidiaries are created or used as sham.” The moot question is whether the Cayman Island structure was created for genuine purposes or was it a sham. This is not clear from the reading of the judgment. Nevertheless one hastens to add that one has never heard of genuine structures in tax havens.

In the process the Court has not fully reconciled the idea of directing mind principle in corporate law, the very definition of subsidiaries as enunciated by Companies Act, and its own “puppet theory.” It may not be out of place to mention that the transfer of a single share, several directors owing allegiance to Hutch in downstream companies resigned, and directors appointed by Vodafone assumed control.

It is also respectfully submitted that the idea of borrowing from the DTC (which is still in an embryonic stage) is pregnant with serious legal consequences. By that logic a proposal to abolish capital punishment in India could well be the arguments of convicts to escape the hangman’s noose!

Obviously, the ghosts of Vodafone will continue to haunt Indian business and government for a long time to come. There are some unanswered questions; some answers that require greater appreciation on the facts and circumstances of the case and some are perhaps ahead of our times. Whatever be it, one must concede it is the law of the land, for the Supreme Court is well and truly supreme, through not infallible.

The author is a Chennai-based chartered accountant. He can be contacted at mrv@mrv.net.in  

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A judgment ahead of our times!

Jennifer Granholm talks to Sen. Carl Levin about offshore tax havens – Video

06-02-2012 23:43 Sen. Carl Levin (D-MI) criticizes Mitt Romney's stance on defense spending and pushes for an end of offshore tax havens that allow shelters for many wealthy Americans. Jennifer Granholm asks, "Should Mitt Romney be able to hide assets in Swiss Bank accounts?" No, Levin replies, "Tax avoidance by using these tax havens should be made illegal." Tune in Weeknights at 9:00/8:00c on Current TV current.com

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Jennifer Granholm talks to Sen. Carl Levin about offshore tax havens - Video

Dewar on taxes

Paul Dewar talks to the Toronto Star editorial board.

On taxes:
What I call tax justice in this country. The corporate tax level is down to 15 per cent; obviously I think that should be increased to 19.5 per cent. That keeps us competitive with our competitors. Tax havens, between 2000 and 2008, $17 billion left our country for foreign shores — and that was just from our banks. I’d like to see that dealt with. I’d like to see us look at a financial transactions tariff, which is being contemplated in Europe.

What about hiking personal income tax?
I’d like to fix the leaks in our system before I look at that. I have no problem in looking at an increase in personal income tax if I knew that it was going to stay in revenues and I say that because there are ways, which many people are probably aware of, to avoid taxes. So the first thing you need to look at is tax loopholes.

How much would all that raise?
I couldn’t tell you to a dime. But I can tell you in the case of tax havens we’re talking more than $20 billion, I can tell you in the case of the corporate tax level that we’re talking tens of billions of dollars and I can tell you in the case of the financial transactions tariff a very conservative estimate is about $4 billion dollars.

The NDP proposed a crackdown on tax havens in last year’s election. At the time, they booked $1 billion in new revenue for the current fiscal year, rising to $3.2 billion in 2014-2015. Ira Basen deemed that “wishful accounting.” The Liberals posed various questions.

The Harper government proposed in its 2007 budget to deal with tax havens and a few months later, the Finance Minister explained the “Anti-Tax-Haven Initiative.” Two years later, following the recommendations of the Advisory Panel on Canada’s System of International Taxation, the Harper government repealed the “double dip” restrictions.

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Dewar on taxes