Montreal Gazette

Canadians reveal offshore assets

Previously unreported income more than doubled in year, CRA says

- BARBARA SHECTER

The number of voluntary disclosure­s of offshore income and assets to Canada’s tax authority nearly doubled in the year ended March 31 from the previous 12 months, the first time such figures have been gathered since the Canada Revenue Agency implemente­d a whistleblo­wer reward system to root out tax cheats.

The amount of previously unreported income more than doubled to $780 million.

The figures, obtained from the Canada Revenue Agency by the Financial Post, illustrate a sharp increase in a growing trend of selfreport­ing.

More than 10,000 voluntary disclosure­s of offshore activities were made in the past year, up from just 1,215 in 2006-07.

That number had grown to 5,248 by March 2014, a year in which $303 million in previously unreported income was identified.

Taxpayers who use the CRA’s voluntary disclosure­s program must pay taxes owed, plus interest, but they may avoid heavy penalties and prosecutio­n under the law that could result if their offshore activities are discovered by Canadian tax authoritie­s.

Self-reporting may have climbed sharply in the past year, at least in part because of a program insti- tuted by the CRA in January 2014 that offers financial rewards for tips about Canadians using offshore financial transactio­ns or mechanisms to avoid taxes in this country.

Informants whose tips lead to the collection of at least $100,000 in additional federal tax are eligible to collect between five per cent and 15 per cent of that amount.

The Offshore Tax Informant Program, or OTIP, has already generated more than 2,000 calls, with 543 of those identified as coming from potential informants.

Of those, 208 have followed up with written submission­s and more than 100 cases are being reviewed by the CRA, which “has entered into a number of contracts with informants,” according to spokesman Philippe Brideau.

He said it could be several years before any money is awarded since the tax would have to be collected and any affected taxpayer’s appeal rights would have to have expired.

“The CRA will report to Canadians on results of the OTIP, including the amounts recovered and paid out to informants, through the agency’s annual report to Parliament,” Brideau said in an emailed statement.

Brideau declined to comment on what was behind the surge in voluntary disclosure­s of offshore activities in the most recent fiscal year, noting that the figures won’t be reported to Parliament until the fall. However, last year, he told Bloomberg News that clients of Switzerlan­d’s UBS AG were behind a big surge in voluntary reporting of offshore income.

Thomas Brook, an associate at Fasken Martineau DuMoulin LLP in Toronto who specialize­s in tax law, said greater co-operation between internatio­nal banks and tax authoritie­s is at the root of many of the voluntary disclosure cases he has seen.

“It’s typically because there is disclosure made at the bank level,” Brook said, adding that financial institutio­ns generally tell clients before disclosing informatio­n about offshore property or income that might find its way to their home tax authority.

Regulators around the world have been cracking down on tax cheats who have taken advantage of strict bank privacy rules in so-called tax havens.

Brook said the CRA’s Offshore Tax Informant Program could be leading to more voluntary disclosure in Canada, but many people he encounters aren’t yet aware of it.

However, Jordan A. Thomas, a lawyer who advises whistleblo­wers in the United States and helped develop a rewards-based informant program at the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, said the initial numbers reported by the CRA on the informant program are “remarkable” when judged against similar programs in other jurisdicti­ons.

“As awareness continues to grow, I predict the program will easily surpass the far broader and longestabl­ished IRS whistleblo­wer program,” Thomas said.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? More than 10,000 voluntary disclosure­s of offshore activities were made to Canada Revenue Agency in the past year, up from 5,248 a year earlier, generating previously unreported income of $780 million.
GETTY IMAGES FILES More than 10,000 voluntary disclosure­s of offshore activities were made to Canada Revenue Agency in the past year, up from 5,248 a year earlier, generating previously unreported income of $780 million.

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