New Era

European banks active in tax havens despite scandals: survey

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BRUSSELS – European banks have not reduced their presence in tax havens, despite several scandals that have revealed the dubious practices multinatio­nals use to avoid taxes, according to a study published on Monday.

Europe’s leading banks each yearbook 20 billion euros (US$24 billion), or 14% of their total profits, in 17 territorie­s with particular­ly favourable tax regimes, said a report by the EU Tax Observator­y, which is housed at the Paris School of Economics.

That percentage has remained stable since 2014 when a wave of revelation­s, such as Lux Leaks and Panama Papers, exposed the tax practices used by companies and high-wealth individual­s to avoid tax.

“Despite the growing importance of these issues in the public debate and the political world, European banks have not significan­tly reduced their use of tax havens,” the report said.

The Observator­y, which is headed by Berkeley University professor and tax expert Gabriel Zucman, reviewed data published by 36 financial institutio­ns over the 2014-2020 period, with a special focus on big banks HSBC, Deutsche Bank and Societe Generale.

“We observe a diversity of situations: for HSBC, the bulk of haven profits come from just one haven (Hong Kong), while in other cases multiple tax havens are involved,” it said.

HSBC was tipped as a leader of these practices with more than 62% of its pretax profits booked in tax havens between 2018 and 2020, compared to 49.8% for Italy’s Monte dei Paschi, which came in second place.

Standard Chartered rounded out the podium.

To be sure, both HSBC and Standard Chartered are – while domiciled in London – leading Hong Kong retail and commercial banks. HSBC derives the vast majority of its profit in Asia, with China and Hong Kong the major drivers.

Germany’s Deutsche Bank and NordLB come in fourth and fifth.

The report identifies 17 states and territorie­s as preferred destinatio­ns, including the Bahamas, the British Virgin Islands, the Cayman Islands, Jersey and Guernsey, Gibraltar, Hong Kong, Macau, Panama and the EU member states of Malta and Luxembourg.

“Profits booked by banks in tax havens are abnormally high: 238 000 euros per employee, as opposed to around 65 000 euros in non-haven countries,” the report said.

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