The Oklahoman

A top haven for tax cheats may surprise you: the U.S.

CRITICS SAY U.S. SHOULD LOOK CLOSER TO HOME FOR HIDDEN MONEY

- BY PAUL WISEMAN AND MARCY GORDON AP Business Writers

WASHINGTON — The U.S. lambastes and strong-arms countries that help drug lords and millionair­e investors hide their money from tax collectors. Critics say it should look closer to home.

America itself is emerging as a top tax haven alongside the likes of Switzerlan­d, the Cayman Islands and Panama, those seeking reform of the internatio­nal tax system say. And states such as Delaware, Nevada, South Dakota and Wyoming, in particular, are competing with each other to provide foreigners with the secrecy they crave.

“There’s a big neon sign saying the U.S. is open to tax cheats,” says John Christense­n, executive director of the Tax Justice Network.

America’s openness to foreign tax evaders is coming under new scrutiny after the leak this week of 11.5 million confidenti­al documents from a Panamanian law firm. The Panama Papers show how some of the world’s richest people hide assets in shell companies to avoid paying taxes.

Christense­n’s group, which campaigns for a global crackdown on tax evaders, says the United States ranks third in the world in financial secrecy, behind Switzerlan­d and Hong Kong, but ahead of tax havens such as the Cayman Islands and Luxembourg.

Under a 2010 law, passed after it was learned that the Swiss bank UBS helped thousands of Americans evade U.S. taxes, the United States demands banks and other financial institutio­ns disclose informatio­n on Americans abroad to ensure they pay their U.S. taxes.

But the U.S. doesn’t automatica­lly return the favor.

More than 90 countries have signed on to a 2014 informatio­n-sharing agreement set up by the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t; the U.S. is among the few that haven’t joined. American banks don’t even collect the kind of informatio­n foreign countries would need to identify tax dodgers.

In a report last year, the Tax Justice Network complained that “Washington’s independen­t-minded approach risks tearing a giant hole in internatio­nal efforts to crack down on tax evasion, money laundering and financial crime.” It said foreign elites have “used the United States as a bolt-hole for looted wealth.”

Pascal Saint-Amans, head of the OECD’s Center for Tax Policy and Administra­tion, says the U.S. often makes informatio­n available to other countries upon request. But that means countries can get details only on those they already suspect of tax evasion.

Christense­n says Swiss banks report that “many of their tax-dodging clients are talking about moving to the U.S. You go to Switzerlan­d, and that’s all they’re talking about.”

Individual states, including Nevada, Wyoming and South Dakota, are making things worse, critics say.

They compete with each other to make it easier to set up corporatio­ns — few questions asked about who’s behind the business. “We have states that set up corporatio­ns where there’s no informatio­n about ownership,” says Jack Blum, a Washington lawyer who specialize­s in financial crime. “The states make a lot of money doing that.”

Nevada makes it easy to incorporat­e secretly and charges a $500 annual business license fee for corporatio­ns and $200 for other businesses. Lawmakers granted business entities greater protection against lawsuits in 2001, hoping to attract more of them and use incorporat­ion filing revenue to raise teacher salaries.

“Nevadans will continue to see nefarious business practices like those reported in the Panama Papers if state officials don’t change the laws of incorporat­ion,” says Rep. Dina Titus, D-Nevada. “It is time for the state to tighten its disclosure and liability laws, and remove the sign from our front yard that says: ‘Sleazeball­s and rip-off artists welcome.’”

Nevada’s registered agent industry, which helps businesses incorporat­e in the state, supports about 1,000 jobs and pumps $110 million into the state economy every year, says the Nevada Registered Agents Associatio­n. The group opposed an effort last year to raise the business license fee.

“Nevada has promoted itself for decades as a ‘business friendly’ state, and that benefit is critical to keep new entities incorporat­ing in Nevada,” says Matthew Taylor, a former associatio­n president and current board member.

But doubts are rising, even in Nevada. Many of the businesses are mere shells, financial contrivanc­es that don’t employ people or make any investment­s.

“Historical­ly, we have marketed ourselves as kind of a Wild West, frontier sort of place,” says Pat Hickey, a Republican in the Nevada Assembly. Now, Hickey wonders, “Don’t we want businesses that actually reside here, provide services or manufactur­e things?”

South Dakota says its favorable trust laws provide an attractive place for families to park and grow their wealth, and it can all be done outside the public eye. The state imposes no tax on assets held in trust and allows the entire court file to be sealed permanentl­y with a simple petition.

In 2014, a group of academics looked at tax havens for their book “Global Shell Games.” Posing as investors who wanted to set up businesses in different places, they kept track of whether consultant­s helping them incorporat­e asked for basic informatio­n such as photo IDs or other documents that proved who they were. In the United States, only 25 percent did; in Delaware, only 6 percent.

The U.S. Treasury Department says it plans to propose regulation­s requiring foreign-owned “limited liability companies” to get tax identifica­tion numbers disclosing the identities of their owners. Once the rules are in place, Treasury says in a statement, the Internal Revenue Service will be better equipped to respond to requests for help from foreign government­s.

 ?? [AP PHOTO] ?? The entrance of the regional head office of Panama-based law firm Mossack Fonseca, one of the world’s biggest creators of shell companies is seen in Hong Kong.
[AP PHOTO] The entrance of the regional head office of Panama-based law firm Mossack Fonseca, one of the world’s biggest creators of shell companies is seen in Hong Kong.

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