The Borneo Post

EU blacklists 17 tax havens

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BRUSSELS: European Union ministers adopted a blacklist of 17 non-EU tax havens including Panama, South Korea and the United Arab Emirates after a year of tough negotiatio­ns.

The Paradise Papers leak last month gave a new impetus to the plan, making public some of the intricate ways the world’s rich evade tax using offshore havens.

“We have adopted at EU level a list of states which are not doing enough to fight tax evasion. This blacklist includes 17 states,” French finance minister Bruno Le Maire told reporters in Brussels.

The EU has struggled for over a year to finalise the blacklist, with smaller, low-tax EU nations such as Ireland, Malta and Luxembourg worried about scaring off multinatio­nals.

The countries on the list are: American Samoa, Bahrain, Barbados, Grenada, Guam, Macau, the Marshall Islands, Mongolia, Namibia, Palau, Panama, Saint Lucia, Samoa, South Korea, Trinidad and Tobago, Tunisia and the United Arab Emirates.

A further 47 countries are on a ‘grey list’, sources said.

Other jurisdicti­ons are understood to have been given leeway after suffering severe damage during hurricanes in the Caribbean earlier this year.

Britain fought particular­ly hard against the list, afraid that its crown dependenci­es, including Jersey and the Virgin Islands, would be singled out.

Senior officials from member states had whittled down an initial draft of 29 countries, with divisions still strong in recent days on who would make the final version.

EU Economic Affairs Commission­er Pierre Moscovici said ahead of the official announceme­nt that this was fewer than the 20 countries he had hoped for but would be a ‘initial victory’.

We have adopted at EU level a list of states which are not doing enough to fight tax evasion. This blacklist includes 17 states. Bruno Le Maire, French finance minister

Enforcemen­t is the biggest problem, with EU countries split over whether blackliste­d countries should be subjected to financial sanctions or if the list itself is shaming enough.

Several states, including France, support tough measures against the listed tax havens such as exclusion from EU and World Bank funding, though the debate is still open.

Other countries are reluctant to draw up common sanctions, believing that responsibi­lity is better left to member states.

“To be on a blacklist is in itself bad enough and of course there will be consequenc­es for these countries,” Luxembourg Finance Minister Pierre Gramegna said.

An existing list of tax havens compiled by the Organisati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t (OECD) currently includes only Trinidad and Tobago.

The EU originally screened a total of 92 jurisdicti­ons and once the list is compiled it is expected to be continuous­ly updated.

In a blow to activists, states that charge no corporate tax are not automatica­lly considered at risk of breaching EU tax criteria.

However, the criteria do single out countries that facilitate the creation of shell companies and other structures that could aid tax avoidance.

Countries in the EU’s firing line have been given an opportunit­y to stay off the list if they provide a political commitment and a detailed plan to comply.

All countries, which initially included the US, were given until Tuesday’s meeting of the EU’s 28 finance ministers to provide feedback and possible measures to satisfy EU demands.

The list is the latest internatio­nal effort to clamp down on tax avoidance – increasing­ly seen as a moral issue – following the OECD’s move to compile a list of ‘ uncooperat­ive tax havens’. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Oxfam activists stage a satirical street-play mimicking wealthy people hidding their money in tax haven, on December 5, near the European institutio­ns in Brussels, within a meeting of EU ministers over a credible blacklist of non-EU tax havens.
— AFP photo Oxfam activists stage a satirical street-play mimicking wealthy people hidding their money in tax haven, on December 5, near the European institutio­ns in Brussels, within a meeting of EU ministers over a credible blacklist of non-EU tax havens.

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