Channel
Islands and Isle of Man will be among those ordered to reveal names behind
hidden accounts
The guardian, The Observer, Jamie Doward, Saturday 24 November 2012
The Cayman Islands: will they really come clean about their tax practices? Photograph: Martin Barraud/Getty Images |
Radical
plans to force the UK's tax havens to reveal the names behind hidden companies,
account holders and trusts have been drawn up by the Treasury.
The news
has delighted tax justice campaigners, who predict that the move, which is
expected to be unveiled in the chancellor's autumn statement and come into
force in 2014, will have major consequences for those trying to hide their
money offshore.
A leaked
document reveals that the UK plans to impose its own version of the US Foreign
Account Tax Compliance Act (Fatca) on the crown dependencies of Jersey,
Guernsey and the Isle of Man, as well as its overseas territories, such as the
Cayman Islands.
Fatca,
which will come into force in the middle of next year, requires foreign banks
to report American account holders to the US Inland Revenue Service. The draft
UK equivalent, seen by the magazine International Tax Review, will require
British tax havens to make similar disclosures about UK account holders to UK
tax authorities.
"It's
a complete bombshell for these places," Richard Murphy, a tax expert who
has seen the draft plan, told the Observer. "Some people will try to flee,
but this is going to change the whole of the offshore market."
He
explained that the draft plan amounted to the UK using US legislation to give
tax havens an ultimatum: "It's either they give the UK the same data that
they want to give the US or the UK won't pass their laws to let data flow to
the US."
The
ultimatum is crucial, Murphy suggested. If the UK refuses to pass the laws, its
tax havens "might just as well shut up shop since there would be almost no
banks or other institutions willing to locate there".
News of the
plans is likely to surprise many tax experts. This month, responding to an
international development committee report, the government publicly rejected
the need for a UK version of Fatca.
Joseph
Stead, Christian Aid's senior adviser on economic justice, said that if the
draft was implemented it "would be the beginning of the end for tax haven
secrecy".
However, he
said it was vital that it should not just be the UK which obtains full
information disclosure from its tax havens: "We should ensure that other
countries get it too, so they can catch up with people and companies hiding
money. Otherwise there will be tax haven secrecy for some countries and not
others.
"Poor
countries lose billions every year to tax dodging and tax havens are often
involved. We hope the UK government will use the G8 meeting it is hosting next
year to agree action to ensure a global end to tax haven secrecy."
The
Treasury declined to comment but confirmed to the Review that it was assisting
the UK's crown dependencies and overseas territories to produce their response
to Fatca.
However,
former Liberal Democrat Treasury spokesman Lord Oakeshott was sceptical about
whether the plan could succeed. "Tax havens really coming clean are as
likely as a snowy Christmas day in the Cayman Islands," he said.
Last night
the Labour shadow chancellor, Ed Balls, outlined a five-point plan for tackling
tax avoidance. In an article for the Huffington Post, Balls writes: "We
urgently need to look at how UK tax laws can be made stronger so as to properly
deter tax avoidance."
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