The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Offshore shell companies, the black hole of global finance

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WASHINGTON: Anonymousl­y owned shell companies, against which the G20 economic powers pledged action Friday, amount to a global black hole that legally puts trillions of dollars out of tax authoritie­s’ reach.

The ‘Panama Papers’, leaked two weeks ago from the Mossack Fonseca law firm, which helps set up such companies, opened a window into that world.

The documents show how thousands and thousands of the mailbox business fronts exist worldwide, most often in tax havens like Panama, the British Virgin Islands and the Cayman Islands, enabling untraceabl­e owners to stash assets, legal or illegal, offshore.

Often encased by other shell entities like Russian nesting dolls, their existence represents a gaping hole in the internatio­nal effort to combat tax evasion launched in 2009, which forced banks around the world to share account holders’ data with their home tax agencies.

The business of providing secrecy through shell companies isn’t confined to sunny Caribbean or Pacific islands. In the United States, a number of individual states such as Delaware and Wyoming are hubs for shell company registrati­on. Their promise of secrecy has made the United States an increasing­ly popular destinatio­n for foreigners wanting to hide assets, legal or illicit.

Russia’s notorious arms trader Viktor Bout deployed shell companies around the world to hide his activities, including in the US.

Britain’s Jersey and Guernsey islands are also popular tax havens. In a recent case, anonymous companies set up in Jersey enabled a bank affiliated with the Iranian government and restricted by US sanctions to control a Manhattan skyscraper.

“They are designed for concealmen­t and so are as useful for getting around sanctions as they are for tax avoidance or money laundering,” said Pascal Saint-Amans, head of the Organisati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t’s unit fighting tax havens.

The G20’s new commitment to opening up that black hole came out of a push this week by France, Germany, Britain, Italy and Spain, which said they would take the lead in establishi­ng a registry of shell company owners’ identities, with aims to expand it worldwide. — AFP

 ??  ?? Panama flags wave in Panama City. — Reuters photo
Panama flags wave in Panama City. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? A Mossack Fonseca law firm logo is pictured in Panama City. — Reuters photo
A Mossack Fonseca law firm logo is pictured in Panama City. — Reuters photo

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