Dangerous Ideas in Development Why are Aid Donors Frightened of Taxation?
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Transcript of Dangerous Ideas in Development Why are Aid Donors Frightened of Taxation?
Dangerous Ideas in Development
Why are Aid Donors Frightened of Taxation?
John ChristensenDirector
taxNEWSPEAK: The art of obfuscation challenges to national sovereignty in an
era of transnational trade and investment economic confusions
role of tax incentives defining capital flight “tax efficiency” – a good thing, or bad?
legal confusions evasion v avoidance
don’t mess with corruption dirty deeds in secret places: romantic
notions about small islands, and the problem of case studies
Reasons to be fearful: part three
whose job is it anyway?
international tax cooperation is obscure and generally under-developed
an alphabet soup of international institutions and initiatives:OECD / IMF / FATF / ECOSOC / UNCAC
/ ONODCP / FSF / IASB there is no tax equivalent to the WTO –
so who do we lobby? A global parliament? (Monbiot, The Guardian, 24 April 2007)
Companies and rich people exert a useful ‘discipline’ on high-tax high-spend governments: discuss
“Tax competition is the only agent of productivity for
governments – it is the only competition they
have.”
Jacques de Saussurepartnet, Pictet & Cie
Quoted in The Economist, 24 FEB 2007
legal barriers duties of directors and professional
advisers much tax planning happens in the
grey space between national legal systems
the legal basis for much tax avoidance could be overthrown by a general anti-avoidance principle
who can exert control over the tax havens?
economic confusions if tax competition can be harmful (as
the OECD tells us it can), in what circumstances can it be benign?
capital flight – poorly defined and under-researched
tax avoidance – a director’s duty? Or the trump card in the corporate social responsibility debate?
tax incidence – a contested area!!
confused thinking on corruption
flawed definitions plus biased perceptions result in a skewed geography
‘phase two’ of the corruption debate needs to focus on the Enablers
extreme tax – new agendas
Finance for Development – the Road to Doha
trade negotiations debt relief corporate responsibility and accountability global governance anti-corruption initiatives
www.taxjustice.net
taxNEWSPEAK – some examples
tax efficiency proactive asset protection tax advantaged products mitigating tax risks
The ProblemThe deliberate and illicit disguised expatriation of money by those resident or taxable within the country of origin. Tax evasion is often the motive for capital flight.
Who owes what to whom?
Despite the massive debt incurred in the past, Sub-Saharan Africa is a net creditor to the rest of the world in the sense that external assets (i.e. the stock of flight capital) exceeds external liabilities (i.e. external debt).
The stock of capital flight from SSA (estimated at $274 billion including interest earnings) was equivalent to 145 per cent of the total debt owed by the countries in the mid-1990s.
Boyce, J.K. and Ndikumana, L. (2005)
“Tax is a cost of doing business so, naturally, a good manager will try to manage this cost and the risks associated with it. This is an essential part of good corporate governance.”
Re-thinking corruption
Re-examine prevailing definition:the misuse of entrusted power for private gains -- to take account of all actions which undermine public confidence in the integrity of the systems of laws and institutions which structure economic and social transactions.
Country rank
Tax haven countries
2006 CPI score
5 Singapore 9.47 Switzerland 9.19 Netherlands 8.7
11 Luxembourg / UK 8.615 Hong Kong 8.316 Germany 8.018 Ireland 7.420 Belgium / USA 7.324 Barbados 6.726 Macau 6.628 Malta 6.431 U.A.E.(Bahrain/
Dubai/RAS)6.2
Country rank
African countries
2006 CPI score
156 Chad / DCR / Sudan
2.0
155 Cote d’Ivoire / Equatorial Guinea
2.1
142 Angola / Congo Kenya /Nigeria / Sierra Leone
2.2
138 Cameroon / Niger 2.3
130 Burundi / CAR / Ethiopia / Togo
2.4
the geography of corruptionTransparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index: 2006