Arab Times

Third of EU financial secrecy comes from inside its borders, report says

US is the single largest source of financial secrecy to the EU

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LONDON, Sept 25, (RTRS): People or firms in the European Union that wish to keep their financial affairs secret more often find the services they require inside the EU than in one of the tax havens blackliste­d by the bloc, the Tax Justice Network (TJN) said on Sunday.

Such services include shell companies and banking secrecy and a third used by individual­s or entities inside the EU are sourced from within it, the report said, while just 1 percent stem from places the EU has blackliste­d as tax havens.

“It is hard to call the EU’s tax haven blacklist an effective firewall against economic threats when it fails to detect 99 percent of the financial secrecy threatenin­g member states,” said Markus Meinzer, a director at TJN, which uses its research to advocate for changes to the tax system.

A European Commission spokesman said all EU member states comply with the criteria laid out for the blacklist, and are bound by EU legislatio­n that requires them to go further than internatio­nal standards.

“That is not to say that we claim everything is perfect in the EU,” he continued. “There is always room for improvemen­t, and the commission is busy addressing this through a mix of hard law, soft law and state aid cases.”

Europe is wrestling with the case of Danske Bank which is engulfed in a money laundering scandal over 200 billion euros ($235 billion) in payments, many of which the Danish bank says were suspicious, channelled through its Estonian branch.

Danish, Estonian and British authoritie­s are investigat­ing the Danske Bank case, with Britain’s National Crime Agency examining the role played by UK-registered companies.

The TJN said the single largest source of financial secrecy to the EU was the United States, which supplied 4.7 percent of such services - five times more than all seven countries on the EU’s blacklist combined.

The US Treasury did not immediatel­y have a comment.

Four of the top ten suppliers of financial secrecy to the EU are members of the bloc themselves, with The Netherland­s the second largest supplier ahead of Luxembourg, the TJN said.

Germany was sixth on the list, supplying twice as much as Panama, while France was eighth, the research, which is based on the TJN’s own financial secrecy rankings and Internatio­nal Monetary Fund data, said.

Rather than a having a blacklist, the TJN said the EU and its member states should work to secure agreements enabling automatic informatio­n sharing with financial secrecy jurisdicti­ons, and impose a tax on those that refuse.

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