Wednesday, 4 March 2009

Tax Havens

From the TUC's website:

Tax avoidance by wealthy UK residents through tax havens costs UK tax payers at least £4 billion a year, according to new research published today (Sunday) by the TUC.

The TUC research is the first ever analysis of the role of individual tax havens in tax lost to the UK. It shows that most of the loss to tax havens is caused by Jersey, Switzerland, the Isle of Man and Guernsey.

Under the EU's Savings Tax Directive, UK residents who hold off-shore bank accounts in tax havens could either declare all their interest to HMRC or opt to have 15 per cent tax withheld from the interest payments by the tax haven where they hold their account. Three-quarters (75 per cent) of this is then paid to the UK government, with the rest being retained by the government of the tax haven. This makes the effective UK tax rate on such off-shore accounts 11.25 per cent, rather than the 40 per cent that would be paid if the money was held in the UK in the period the research covers.

An analysis of figures given in a recent parliamentary answer of the sums involved by TUC tax consultant Richard Murphy has produced the first ever estimates of how much UK tax payers lose through such off-shore accounts, and the amount lost in each of the tax havens. The figures show that over the last three years the total tax lost was £319 million on a total income from such accounts for their holders of £1.1 billion. Most money was lost over the period reviewed through accounts in Jersey (£94 million), Switzerland (£72 million), the Isle of Man (£68 million) and Guernsey (£47 million).

But these figures are a serious underestimate of the total tax lost through tax havens for two main reasons. First, a conservative estimate is that over five times more money is held in offshore accounts by companies or trusts set up for the benefits of the super-rich which are not covered by these rules. Secondly, evidence suggests that only 18 per cent of assets held off-shore are held as cash in such accounts.

Using conservative assumptions for these factors, the TUC estimates that the total tax loss last year from UK residents (without non-dom status) holding assets off-ashore to avoid and evade tax is at least £4 billion.

TUC General Secretary Brendan Barber said: 'The mechanisms of tax avoidance are always hard to understand, but this is a very simple story. If the super-rich held their money and assets in the UK they would contribute at least £4 billion pounds extra.

'This would be enough for the Government to meet its target to halve child poverty by 2010. It would also mean that instead of being squirreled away in tax havens, it was being spent in the real economy here helping us fight recession. With the tax take falling because of the recession, there can be no better time to get tough with the super-rich, so many of whom did so much to throw the world into recession.

'We welcome the Prime Minister's call for the G20 to get tough on tax havens. This is an important demand of the unions, development and faith groups organising the 'Put People First' march for jobs, justice and climate on 28 March in the run up to the London G20 summit. But the UK Government can do much more.

'It should back plans to reform the EU Savings Tax Directive to enhance information exchange between tax havens and the UK and other member states. It could also require that all the many tax havens it controls cancel the tax withholding option they now offer that provides this continuing opportunity for tax abuse. And we could require that they place the accounts - and even trusts - that are registered in their domains on public record so everyone can see what is going on in each tax haven.'

Of course, since there is clearly going to have to be a taking hold of the Crown Dependencies and the British Overseas Territories, the greater exercise of control must be accompanied by greater rights for the ordinary British inhabitants.

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