The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Strengthen internatio­nal network to find hidden assets overseas

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There has been no end to cases in which people have hidden assets overseas while not paying taxes. The internatio­nal monitoring network must be strengthen­ed to establish a system that does not allow delinquent payers to benefit by escaping.

The national tax authoritie­s in Japan do not have the power to seize assets from individual­s and companies that have failed to pay their taxes if they hide their assets overseas. The Japanese authoritie­s have to ask the foreign tax authority in the location where the assets are held to seize the assets.

This mechanism is called “mutual assistance in the collection of taxes” and was introduced in 2013. Japan has concluded agreements on mutual assistance with about 70 countries and regions. There were only a few requests annually for the first five years, but the figure reportedly increased to 29 cases in fiscal 2019 for a total of ¥3.7 billion.

In one case in 2018, Japan asked Australia to seize the Australian bank account of a man who refused to pay gift tax and collected all ¥800 million in arrears.

Even if tax investigat­ion detected undeclared or concealed income, it is meaningles­s to impose taxes on the income without actually collecting the money. The fact that internatio­nal cooperatio­n in the field of tax collection has begun to gain momentum is a major step forward.

The rapid increase in mutual assistance for tax collection is partly due to the fact that it has become easier to obtain informatio­n on assets overseas.

The Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t has establishe­d a system in which about 100 countries and regions, including non-OECD members, provide each other with account informatio­n. Japan joined the system in 2018 and obtained nearly 2 million pieces of informatio­n in fiscal 2019.

In a reporting system on assets overseas introduced in 2014, an individual in Japan is obliged to report any assets held abroad worth over ¥50 million to Japanese tax offices. Informatio­n must be swiftly collected to identify hidden assets.

China and Southeast Asian countries, where many Japanese companies operate, are not on the list of countries with which Japan has concluded mutual assistance agreements. To increase the effectiven­ess of taxation and tax collection, Japan should persistent­ly seek to conclude mutual assistance agreements with such countries.

In their outline for tax system reforms in the next fiscal year, the ruling Liberal Democratic Party and Komeito included a plan to strengthen measures against hidden assets overseas. They seek to widen the scope of criminal penalties against those who transfer assets overseas with the purpose of avoiding seizure.

The progress of digitizati­on has accelerate­d the internatio­nal flows of funds. Efforts to circumvent the network of internatio­nal cooperatio­n must be contained.

In recent years, there has been an increase in the amount of undeclared income by corporatio­ns and wealthy people who do business with overseas partners and clients. The public will feel it is unfair if malicious tax evasion is overlooked. Illicit concealmen­t of property must not be allowed also for the purpose of encouragin­g appropriat­e tax payments.

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