Kuwait Times

Footballer­s’ advisers under scrutiny over tax evasion

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Cristiano Ronaldo under suspicion, Radamel Falcao investigat­ed, Lionel Messi sentenced... Spain’s courts have been busy tackling the alleged and real multi-million-euro tax evasion of football’s greatest stars.

But while they may be aware of what they are doing, footballer­s rely on expert go-betweens like big banks to help them manage their finances, and the European Commission is looking into measures that would dissuade these intermedia­ries from assisting wealthy individual­s in avoiding tax.

On top of their mammoth salaries and victory bonuses, the world’s leading footballer­s earn millions by loaning their name and image for ad campaigns-be it sports equipment, underwear or yoghurt.

AGENTS, ADVISERS UNDER SCRUTINY

FC Barcelona’s Argentine forward Messi was handed a 2.1-million-euro ($2.3 million) fine last year for avoiding paying taxes on part of the income he earned from image rights via companies in Belize, Britain, Switzerlan­d and Uruguay.

When it confirmed the sentence last month, Spain’s Supreme Court rejected Messi’s argument that he ignored how his wealth was managed but still expressed surprise at the fact that his tax advisors were not prosecuted. Monaco’s Colombian forward Falcao, meanwhile, is suspected of having hidden 5.6 million euros in image rights from Spain’s taxman when he played for Atletico Madrid in 2012 and 2013.

His Portuguese agent Jorge Mendes has been put under formal investigat­ion in the case, and will be questioned by a judge on June 27.

Mendes, one of the most influentia­l personalit­ies in the football world, is also the agent of Ronaldo, who risks legal proceeding­s in Spain after prosecutor­s alleged this week that he evaded more than 14 million euros in tax through offshore companies.

If the Real Madrid star “is finally put under formal investigat­ion, the judge will also have to ask how guilty the advisors and agents are,” says Carlos Cruzado, head of the Gestha union of civil servants who work for tax authoritie­s.

EU TO FIGHT BACK

In a bid to avoid specialise­d go-betweens from exploiting legal loopholes to pay as little tax as possible, EU Economics Commission­er Pierre Moscovici will on Wednesday unveil a new directive against “fiscal optimisati­on.”

“So far little has been done to introduce disincenti­ves for those intermedia­ries that help clients avoid paying their fair share of tax,” a spokesman for the commission told AFP.

The directive aims to force those who advise people with lots of money or companies to declare the transborde­r products they propose to their clients to the taxman.

“Tax authoritie­s will then be able to better-and much earlier-identify the regulatory weaknesses that allow some companies and individual­s to substantia­lly reduce their taxes,” he said.

The commission is not targeting just sportspeop­le. But these often resort to tax experts to manage their wealth-be they individual­s, private practices or internatio­nal banks. “We’re not talking about an adviser who helps you fill in your income tax return, but offices that are specialise­d in setting up opaque structures, and many are internatio­nal banks,” says Jose Mari Pelaez, a tax inspector who specialise­s in tax havens.

These offices can offer “made to measure” services, he adds. Last year, it was revealed that many of the 175,000 offshore companies registered in the Bahamas, a tax haven, between 1959 and 2016 were created by banks, according to informatio­n leaked to the Internatio­nal Consortium of Investigat­ive Journalist­s.

Without these intermedia­ries, it would be very difficult to access a tax haven. “But with a phone call and 500 to 800 euros, such an office can set up one or two shell companies with a bank account in Switzerlan­d or in another tax haven,” says Pelaez.

“It takes two or three days and hardly costs a thing.” — AFP

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