Cyborg | Designer-Babies | Futurism | Futurist | Immortality | Longevity | Nanotechnology | Post-Human | Singularity | Transhuman

SURELY G. Griffiths of Downend is not seriously suggesting that we should “honour” those who leave this country to reside in tax havens like Guernsey in order to avoid what most of us consider are legitimate tax responsibilities?

The Times Rich List 2011 shows that the top 1,000 people in the UK are 18 per cent richer than a year earlier with their personal fortunes swollen through tax avoidance andor being a tax exile.

Tax avoidance and the use of tax havens means less resources for education, the National Health Service, social services and indeed all those public provisions which , until recently, made this country a more caring and civilised place to live.

We should all welcome the opportunity to contribute to tax revenues legitimately and democratically imposed, based on the ability to pay.

Ron Thomas

Follow this link:
Bristol Evening Post commented No honour in avoiding tax

News that Barclays (LSE: BARC.L – news) has fallen foul of the authorities for highly abusive tax avoidance schemes will not come as a surprise to those who follow Britains banks.

Barclays has long been perceived as the most aggressive player in the tax structuring business, devising products that arbitraged the rules to reduce clients bills. At its peak, Barclays even turned a part of its operation structured capital markets (SCM) over to tax avoidance.

SCM, under Roger Jenkins, became a huge profit engine. In one year, it was reported to have made 1bn for the bank and, shortly afterwards, Jenkins shot to notoriety as Barclays best-paid employee pocketing a reputed 40m a year. As SCM sat within the investment bank, Barclays Capital, the details were never properly disclosed, but never officially rebutted either.

Though legal, the behaviour raised ethical questions that came into particular focus after the financial crisis as, although Barclays never received direct taxpayer support, it relied at times on state funding schemes to keep afloat.

The backlash began in 2009, when Barclays hit the headlines after a whistleblower leaked documents to the Liberal Democrats which purported to show that it was using a network of subsidiaries in the Cayman Islands and Luxembourg to minimise clients taxes.

Barclays had the story injuncted on the grounds that the material was commercially sensitive, but its reputation took a hit and questions began to be asked about how much tax the bank itself was avoiding.

Early last year, it was forced into an embarrassing admission. In front of the Treasury Select Committee, chief executive Bob Diamond, who had nurtured SCM when he was head of BarCap, was forced to reveal that the bank operated nearly 300 subsidiaries in tax havens and had paid just 113m of corporation tax in the UK in 2009 a year in which it handed out 3.4bn in bonuses.

Since then, the questions have not gone away. Politicians have queried whether a bizarre deal struck in 2009 to move billions of toxic assets off its balance sheet was not just a tax ruse. The Protium arrangement raised such serious concerns in the US that the authorities would not let it drop until the deal was unwound at great expense to shareholders last year.

Analysis of Barclays accounts by The Daily Telegraph has raised further questions. According to the 2010 results, the bank generated 591m in tax losses carried forward despite making 6bn of profits before tax. The tax gain suggested the bank crystallised 2bn of losses that year, which the annual report said mainly relates to entities in the USA, the UK and Spain.

However, Barclays would not disclose where the 2bn of losses were incurred once again muddying the waters. The bank now has assets that it can offset against future tax payments that are almost as large as Royal Bank of Scotland and Lloyds Banking Group (LSE: LLOY.L – news) . While both the state-backed banks made huge visible losses, Barclays has reported profits every year for more than a decade.

More:
Barclays has previous when it comes to tax avoidance

Feb 252012

On paper, the U.S. has one of the highest corporate tax rates in the world. But in practice, corporations pay far less. The Government Accountability Office (PDF) estimated the average tax burden at 25.2 percent, and some of the largest corporations, such as General Electric and Wells Fargo, pay no taxes at all. This is possible because the tax code is riddled with exceptions and loopholes, created at the behest of lobbyists and exploited by teams of tax experts, many of whom used to work for the IRS and the Treasury. With the help of Citizens for Tax Justice, The Daily Beast rounded up some of the most egregious corporate tax loopholes.

Deferral of Overseas Income

Multinational companies don’t have to pay U.S. income taxes on overseas profits until they transfer them back home. But in reality, companies just leave their profits in overseas tax havens, deferring taxes indefinitely. Not only that, an accounting scheme known as “transfer pricing” allows companies to move profits from the U.S. to offshore havens so they’re counted as overseas earnings. For example a pharmaceutical company could sell a drug patent to a subsidiary in the Cayman Islands for a nominal fee, then have the subsidiary charge the parent company huge licensing fees. The company can then deduct the licensing fees from its taxable income in the U.S. and send the profits to its foreign subsidiary, where taxes can be indefinitely deferred. Some 83 percent of top 100 publicly traded companies had tax-haven units in 2009, according to the GAO. General Electric, Google, Pfizer, and many other companies use this technique. The federal government loses an estimated (PDF) $100 billion a year through offshore tax abuses.

Deductions for Shipping Jobs Overseas

At first glance it doesn’t seem particularly egregious that corporations can deduct moving expenses, but that changes when the break is applied to companies moving operations overseas. President Obama proposed ending this exemption for companies moving overseas while giving a credit to companies moving back to the U.S.

The Domestic Production Deduction

This deduction was meant to encourage companies to keep manufacturing operations in the U.S. by allowing them to deduct profits from “qualified production activities.” But by the time the law was enacted, those activities had expanded to include not just manufacturing but everything from oil drilling to filmmaking to real estate. (Obama proposed barring oil and gas companies from using the deduction.) The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities estimated that the deduction cost states $500 million in 2011, and the Congressional Budget Office (PDF) estimates it will cost the federal government $163 billion over the next decade.

Getty Images (3)

Last-In, First-Out Accounting

Normally when you buy something for $30 and sell it for $50, you have to pay taxes on a $20 profit. But corporations—especially oil companies—manage their accounts differently. They might buy oil for $30 a barrel, and then buy some more for $45 a barrel later in the year. Then when they sell a barrel of oil for $50, they get to assume that they sold the last barrel they bought, the one that cost $45, allowing them to report a profit of $5 instead of $20. Citizens for Tax Justice estimates that the loophole is worth $97 billion over the next 10 years.

Punitive Damages Deduction

When corporations are hit with punitive damages, they’re able to write them off as an “ordinary and necessary” business expense (PDF). Consequently, Exxon’s $1.1 billion Alaska oil spill settlement actually cost the company $524 million after taxes. Obama’s budget proposes to eliminate the deductibility.

Accelerated Depreciation Deduction

This allows companies to deduct for the depreciation of a piece of equipment at a faster rate than it actually takes the equipment to depreciate. Because interest expenses are also deductible, a company can borrow money to buy equipment, deduct both the interest on the debt and the “accelerated” depreciation of the equipment, and claim deductions greater than the profits generated by the investment. It’s one of the loopholes that allow corporations to pay no taxes during profitable years.

The corporate jet deduction became a hot-button issue during the debt-ceiling debate when President Obama used it as leverage against the Republicans. Under the current law, corporations can claim deductions for the depreciation of their jets at a faster rate than commercial airlines can. Closing the loophole wouldn’t save much money—about $4 billion over 10 years—but as a political symbol, it’s invaluable. (For what it’s worth, yacht owners get an accelerated depreciation deduction plus a few more.)

The 71,000-page tax code is full of accelerated-depreciation loopholes for various industries. Along with corporate jets, NASCAR racetrack owners get a special exemption. They can deduct for the depreciation of their tracks over a seven-year period instead of the 39 years the government estimates (PDF) it actually takes them to depreciate. The break was put in place in 2004 but was renewed in the 2008 financial-system bailout known as TARP. It costs the government $40 million a year.

Go here to read the rest:
8 Ridiculous Tax Loopholes

Stephen Brashear/Getty Images

Boeing employees work on a plane engine at the company's factory in Everett, Wash. The Obama administration's corporate tax cut proposal would offer even deeper cuts for U.S. manufacturers like Boeing.

President Obama's plan to overhaul the nation's corporate tax system would sharply cut the taxes that U.S. companies pay. But it would also eliminate many of the loopholes that help them pare down what they owe.

White House spokesman Jay Carney says the proposal unveiled Wednesday should appeal to both Democrats and Republicans, by doing what both sides “say is important to do … which is lower the rate, broaden the base [and] eliminate the underbrush of unnecessary subsidies and loopholes and special provisions that complicate the tax code.”

But one phrase in Carney's statement reveals why the plan faces an uphill battle in Congress. “Broaden the base” means making more income, from more people, subject to taxation. And business lobbyists know that means eliminating popular tax breaks.

At least on paper, U.S. companies pay a tax rate of 35 percent — higher than almost any other advanced country. Tax Foundation President Scott Hodge says that rate leaves U.S. corporations at a big disadvantage.

“Seventy-five countries have cut their corporate tax rates. And if we look at the rest of the world, it's a very competitive place compared to the United States,” Hodge says.

A Tax Code Loaded With Exemptions

But the U.S. tax code is also loaded with exemptions, deductions and credits of all kinds. And, says Bob McIntyre of Citizens for Tax Justice, most big companies know how to take advantage of them. “Right now we have about a 35 percent nominal corporate tax rate,” he says. “But our big corporations, on average, pay about half that — about 18 percent.”

The Obama administration's plan would cut the corporate tax rate to 28 percent, but it would also get rid of a lot of those loopholes. The plan would also impose a minimum tax on money that companies make overseas, something proponents say would cut down on the use of offshore tax havens.

Administration officials say a simpler tax code would save a lot of companies money. Joel Slemrod, professor of economics at the University of Michigan, agrees.

“Companies spend an enormous amount of money not just complying with the tax system, but planning … how to make use of these complexities and the differences in tax systems across countries to their best advantage,” he says.

To Hodge of the Tax Foundation, which lobbies for lower taxes, the effort to reform the system has come none too soon. “The administration should be given some credit for recognizing that the U.S. corporate tax rate is well out of step with the rest of the world and needs reform,” he says.

But Hodge says the proposed tax cut doesn't go far enough. He also takes issue with a portion of the proposal that would cut the tax rate even further for manufacturers. Administration officials say they want to promote the creation of manufacturing jobs because they offer better pay and tend to lead to other kinds of job creation.

Picking Winners And Losers

But conservatives say the proposed boost to the manufacturing sector amounts to the government, rather than the market, picking winners and losers. The U.S. Chamber of Commerce warned that it would vigorously oppose efforts to pit one industry against another.

The idea is opposed by some liberal groups, as well. McIntyre of Citizens for Tax Justice notes that manufacturers already get big tax breaks.

“You take a company like Boeing, for example. … Boeing hasn't paid a nickel in federal income taxes over the last 10 years. I don't know how you can cut their taxes any further. You really ought to be raising them,” McIntyre says.

Such a move is unlikely to get through Congress in any case, particularly in an election year. Slemrod says hacking away at the thicket of tax credits and exemptions tends to be a tough sell in Washington — and lawmakers who try it quickly back down.

“In the past, anyway, the companies that pay more scream louder than the companies that pay less applaud,” he says.

Still, there is widespread agreement that the tax code, with all its complexities and inequities, must be overhauled at some point — and that doing so would benefit the economy in the long run. The administration's proposal could set the stage for just such reform later on.

Here is the original post:
Obama's Corporate Tax Cut Plan Faces Uphill Battle

Illustration by Alexander Ho for TIME

Yesterday, President Obama announced a long-awaited proposal to cut corporate taxes in America, which U.S. businesses complain are much too high by international standards. The proposed reform is intended to prevent companies from shifting operations and earnings to tax havens (paging Mitt Romney!) and instead encourage companies to bring them back into the U.S., where they could create jobs and growth.

What’s being missed in all this is that the corporate tax debate and the jobs debate are two separate things. Here’s why.

America has the second highest corporate tax rate in the rich world. But most American businesses don’t pay it. The President is suggesting that the corporate tax rate drop from 35% to 28%. But as my colleague Fareed Zakaria wrote a few months back in Time, few of the biggest U.S. businesses are paying that rate right now; indeed, most are paying much less – 115 of the companies in the S & P 500 paid less than 20% in tax over the last five years. And 39 firms paid less than 10%.

(MORE: The Corporate Tax Rate Is Lowest in Decades; Is Business Paying Its Fair Share?)

That gets at the key issue: Fundamentally, lower taxes aren’t the reason that businesses choose to invest, or not, in a certain country. As Warren Buffett told me when I interviewed him late last year, “The idea that American business is at a big disadvantage against the rest of the world because of corporate taxes is baloney in my view. In the 50s and 60s, corporate taxes were 52%, and we were making all kinds of [job] gains.”

True enough. In fact, you can see more and more evidence for the fact that business doesn’t locate in a particular country just because it’s cheaper to do so. Consider the recently released Harvard Business School study looking at insourcing and outsourcing decisions among 10,000 alumnae who are running American businesses. The key reason for outsourcing wasn’t labor cost, but a combination of cost, proximity to market, and (most importantly) better worker skill sets abroad. In order for America to create jobs at home, we need to do the heavy lifting to reform education and develop workers who can do the sort of jobs businesses need them to do. (On that score, I applaud the way the President is trying to link educational reform with the bolstering of American manufacturing.)

(MORE: The Street Fighter: This Man is Busting Wall St.)

This goes to the final point, which is why companies are holding such a huge wad of foreign profits abroad to begin with – $1.5 trillion by some estimates. You can make a case that they simply don’t want to be taxed at 35%. But there’s no reason to think that under our current complicated tax structure, they couldn’t find ways around that, as they do with U.S. earnings.

Even more to the point: As Buffett says, nobody ever stopped investing because of high taxes. Companies stop investing because they don’t fundamentally believe in the growth opportunities in a market. I agree with Buffett that you can’t allow U.S. firms to repatriate foreign profits tax-free; it creates moral hazard. But it would be interesting to see how much of that money would flow back into the U.S. if the rate was 20%, or 12.5%, as it is in Ireland. It would tell us a lot, not only about corporate America’s belief (or lack thereof) in shared sacrifice, but also about their belief (or lack thereof) in the U.S. economy.

Go here to read the rest:
Why Lower Corporate Taxes Won't Create More Jobs

WASHINGTON (AP) — Cutting corporate tax rates and deleting loopholes is just what most economists prescribe for the tangled U.S. tax code.

So why isn't everyone cheering the plan President Barack Obama unveiled Tuesday to slash the top corporate tax rate and end breaks that let some companies pay little or nothing in taxes?

Economists note that Obama's plan would upturn the very playing field the administration says it wants to level. It would give manufacturers preferential treatment: Tax breaks would effectively cap their rate at 25 percent. Other companies would pay up to 28 percent.

The current top corporate tax rate is 35 percent.

Some say such varying rates can distort the economy by diverting investment into some industries and away from others that might pack a bigger economic punch.

“The administration is not making sense,” says Martin Sullivan, contributing editor at publisher Tax Analysts. “The whole idea of corporate tax reform is to get rid of loopholes, and this plan is adding loopholes back in.”

Other economists oppose a separate plank of the Obama plan: a minimum tax on foreign earnings of U.S. multinational companies. No other country imposes such a tax on its companies, they note. U.S. businesses would face a competitive disadvantage.

Facing resistance from Republicans and many businesses, Obama's plan is in any case a longshot proposal so close to Election Day.

“For anything that Obama recommends during an election year and with a divided Congress, the best one can say is, 'Good luck,'” says Henry Aaron, senior fellow in economic studies at the Brookings Institution. “Those who stand to lose are really upset and will work hard to defeat it.”

Just about everybody agrees something has to change. When Japan enacts a corporate tax cut in April, the United States will be left with the highest tax rate in the developed world.

That puts the U.S. companies that actually pay the official corporate tax rate at a disadvantage against their foreign competitors. (Many U.S. companies effectively pay lower rates because of tax breaks.)

The loophole-riddled U.S. tax code now benefits numerous industries over others. One tax break, for example, lets oil companies write off drilling costs immediately instead of over time, as most businesses must.

In the end, different industries can pay far different effective rates. The Treasury Department says U.S. utility companies pay an average effective tax rate of 14 percent. By contrast, retailers pay an average 31 percent.

The administration says the point of its tax plan is to make the system fairer and more efficient — not to squeeze more overall tax revenue from corporations. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner calls the current tax code “fundamentally unfair.” But the administration also needs to end some loopholes to help pay for a lower corporate tax rate.

The White House argues that tax breaks for manufacturers could ultimately pay off for the economy. When factories expand, for example, the benefits tend to spill into other businesses: Shipping companies and warehouses must add jobs, too, to transport and store the goods that manufacturers are producing.

Economists also note that manufacturers account for a disproportionate amount of the research and development that create innovative products and new ways of doing business. The National Science Foundation has found that manufacturing companies are nearly three times likelier to introduce a new or significantly improved product than other companies are.

“Does manufacturing deserve special treatment? This is a hot debate,” says Elisabeth Reynolds, executive director of the Industrial Performance Center at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. “A case can be made that there's a reason to encourage more manufacturing in the United States because of its links to innovation.”

Other economists say that argument is overstated. Among the skeptics is Obama's own former economic adviser, Christina Romer, an economics professor at the University of California, Berkeley. In a column this month in The New York Times, Romer argued that there was no economic justification for the government to favor manufacturers over service-oriented companies.

“Our earnings from exporting architectural plans for a building in Shanghai are as real as those from exporting cars to Canada,” Romer wrote.

Analysts are also divided over Obama's plans to impose a minimum tax on companies' foreign earnings.

Sullivan of Tax Analysts says the current system allows some companies — especially technology and pharmaceutical firms — to avoid U.S. taxes by shifting their earnings to tax havens such as Bermuda and the Cayman Islands. Other multinationals can indefinitely avoid paying U.S. taxes by keeping their earnings overseas.

Lacking such tax breaks, companies that do all their business in the United States suffer a competitive disadvantage.

The minimum tax proposal, Sullivan says, “would level the playing field.”

But big U.S. companies complain that they already pay taxes to foreign governments on the income they earn in those countries. A U.S. tax on that income, they argue, would amount to double taxation.

That would raise costs for U.S. companies operating overseas, making them less competitive. Instead, the United States should move toward a “territorial” tax system, business groups argue. Tax would apply only to income earned within the United States.

“No other developed country imposes such a 'minimum tax' on the foreign earnings of their corporations,” said the Business Roundtable, a trade group of chief executives of large U.S. companies.

Some economists agree.

The minimum tax proposal for international earnings “is totally misguided both from a competitive standpoint and a jobs standpoint,” said Gary Hufbauer, a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics. “Obama's plan, if enacted, will shrink the U.S. footprint in world markets and lose jobs.”

Read this article:
To close tax loopholes, Obama would open new ones

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The Obama administration on Wednesday proposed a plan to revamp the U.S. corporate tax system, slashing the top tax rate to 28 percent, while eliminating many loopholes that companies rely on to cut their taxes.

Although the statutory top corporate tax rate is 35 percent, many companies pay nowhere near that much, with effective tax rates varying wildly because of the use of loopholes.

The administration's plan has little chance of becoming law with elections approaching in November and Congress deeply divided over fiscal issues. Still, the plan opens debate on overhauling the tax code, perhaps in 2013 and beyond.

Among the tax breaks Obama aims to cull are those specific to oil and gas companies, and also broader breaks including accelerated write-offs for business investments.

Below are potential winners and losers under Obama's plan:

LIKELY WINNERS

Likely “winners” under the Obama plan would be retailers such as Wal-Mart Stores Inc and healthcare service groups like Aetna Inc which now pay close to the top 35 percent rate.

Electronics and electrical equipment companies also pay high effective tax rates, according to Citizens for Tax Justice, a left-leaning tax think tank and activist group.

Other companies already paying close to the 35 percent statutory tax rate, include health insurer UnitedHealth Group, motorcycle giant Harley-Davidson and Emerson Electric Co, according to Citizens for Tax Justice.

LIKELY LOSERS

“Losers” might be big multinational companies such as General Electric Co and Boeing Co, which can now pare their effective tax rates using myriad tax breaks.

Other major companies paying a low effective or even negative rate, according to analysis by the group, include Baxter International Inc, Wells Fargo & Co and Honeywell International Inc.

According to CTJ, information technology, oil and gas, and utilities are among those paying far below the 35 percent rate.

Oil and gas companies in particular are likely to be losers, since the Obama administration wants to cut a major tax deduction now used by the industry.

Companies with major international components, specifically valuable intellectual property and other intangible assets, are likely to lose under the plan. Current tax rules let companies shift these assets abroad to trim taxes paid.

Many well-known corporations like Google Inc and Eli Lilly & Co take advantage of tax havens like the Netherlands and Puerto Rico to locate divisions and assets, which suggests they could be hit by the proposed minimum tax on foreign profits.

MANUFACTURING WILD CARD

The administration plan seeks a special 25 percent rate for manufacturing. It would do this by expanding a current tax break for manufacturing to 10.6 percent, from the current 9 percent, and focusing it more narrowly.

Obama also wants to double the credit for what he calls “high-tech” manufacturing, though which sectors would qualify is unclear.

Companies with big research and development costs could also benefit, given the plan's bid to expand that popular credit.

(Reporting By Kim Dixon; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and Matthew Lewis)

View original post here:
Factbox: Winners, losers in Obama corporate tax plan

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The Obama administration on Wednesday proposed a plan to revamp the corporate tax system, slashing the top tax rate to 28 percent, while eliminating many tax loopholes that companies rely on to cut their taxes.

Among other changes, the proposal seeks to curb oil and gas company tax breaks while expanding deductions for manufacturers.

Major business groups largely applauded the lower corporate rate, but criticized the plan for focusing solely on corporate taxes.

Many businesses – such as law firm partners and investment managers – file through the individual side of the tax code, and Obama wants to raise the top rates on high earners.

At least one group representing small businesses applauded the plan for creating a more “level playing field” with larger rivals.

Unions and liberal groups said the plan doesn't go far enough in asking corporate America to pay its fair share.

Here is a snapshot of reactions to the proposal:

BUSINESS GROUPS

U.S. Chamber of Commerce President Thomas Donohue:

“It's appropriate for the White House to acknowledge that the corporate tax code stifles economic growth, undermines the competitiveness of U.S. firms, and needs reform.”

However, he said, “We will be forced to vigorously oppose pay-fors that pit one industry against another or lavish favors on some while punishing others.”

Small Business Majority President John Arensmeyer:

“The president's framework for reforming the tax code will eliminate dozens of loopholes that consistently leave small businesses paying an unfair share of taxes. It will also simplify the tax filing process for small business owners, whose valuable time needs to be spent building their business.”

National Retail Federation President Matthew Shay:

Called the proposal a “positive first step,” but criticized the creation of new tax benefits favoring select industries.

“Tax reform is a once-in-a-generation opportunity and we need to get it right. Reform needs to address small businesses as well as corporations, and needs to be fair to all industries rather than favoring one over another.”

Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association Vice President Kenneth Bentsen:

“The president's proposal is partially undermined by a number of proposed tax increases, such as the proposal to create a new global minimum tax for American companies.”

American Petroleum Institute President Jack Gerard:

“It is the tired old policies of the past that discriminate against the oil and gas industry. Let's do corporate tax reform, bring the corporate rate down and treat everybody consistently and in a balanced way – don't pick winners and losers.”

UNIONS, CONSUMER GROUPS

Richard Trumka, president of union umbrella group AFL-CIO:

“The Obama administration's proposal to reform the corporate tax code takes a number of steps in the right direction, but should have asked more from corporate America.”

Bob McIntyre, president of Citizens for Tax Justice, a liberal-leaning tax activist group:

“We can and should collect more tax revenue from corporations. Right now, America's biggest and most profitable corporations are paying, on average, a ridiculously low amount in federal income taxes, and many of them are paying nothing at all.”

OTHERS

Martin Sullivan, a former Treasury tax official and editor at Tax Analysts:

“The president deserves high grades for a much needed reduction in the corporate rate. And a blanket rule preventing multinationals from parking profits in tax havens is long overdue. But by only suggesting – and not spelling out exactly and endorsing – what other tax breaks could pay for the low rate, he has left the hard part of tax reform undone.”

Michael Mundaca, former top Treasury tax official under Obama, now with accounting firm Ernst and Young:

“A lower rate could benefit U.S. businesses, encourage investment in the United States, and create U.S. jobs. At the same time, because under this framework overseas earnings would continue to be subject to U.S. tax upon repatriation, U.S. multinationals will continue to be concerned about the U.S. tax cost of accessing their earnings overseas and the competitiveness implications of that cost.”

(Reporting By Kim Dixon; Editing by Kevin Drawbaugh and Eric Walsh)

See the rest here:
Factbox: Reaction to Obama's corporate tax proposal

(Asia One) – India's top cop has spoken. He says his countrymen are the largest depositors in foreign banks. Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) director A.P. Singh said in Delhi on Feb 13 that Indians have illegally deposited an estimated US$500 billion (S$622 billion) in overseas tax havens such as Mauritius, Switzerland, Lichtenstein and the British Virgin Islands.

The Press Trust of India reported that he revealed this at the opening of the first Interpol global programme on anti-corruption and asset recovery in the Indian capital. This amount is more than twice India's external debt and close to 30 per cent of the country's gross domestic product (GDP) of US$1.85 trillion last year.

In a November 2010 report, United States-based Global Financial Integrity said India had lost more than US$460 billion between 1948, a year after its independence, and 2008 because of companies and the rich illegally funnelling their wealth overseas.

India Today noted that Mr Singh took a swipe at some of the countries ranked at the top of the honesty chart by Transparency International Index and said 53 per cent of these “least corrupt” countries are favourite destinations for parking black money by individuals and firms.

“For the criminals, it only involves setting up a few shell companies and making layered transfers from one account to another within hours as there are no boundaries in banking transactions,” he said.

DNA reported that the CBI director said the jurisdiction in criminal law is territorial and does not apply to other nations. “Criminals use such principles to their advantage by often spreading the crime over at least two jurisdictions and investing in a third,” MrSingh said.

He said that differences in legal systems, high costs in coordinating investigations, inadequate international cooperation and bank secrecy have made the task difficult for the anti-corruption authorities.

“Tracing, freezing, confiscation, and then repatriation of stolen assets is a legal challenge.

Managing the asset recovery investigation is complex, time consuming, costly and, most importantly, requires expertise and political will,” he added.

The CBI headquarters in Delhi is hosting the six-day event and 39 police officers, investigators and prosecutors from several Interpol member countries are participating. The programme is a first of its kind in which investigators learn ways to identify the assets created out of corrupt practices.

 

Visit link:
Indians have $622 billion in tax havens

It is ‘absolutely nuts’ online retailers can avoid tax so easily, says HMV.

The Government is closing down the Channel Island tax loophole from April, but HMV CEO Simon Fox says this doesn’t go far enough.

He believes that HMV’s big name online rivals such as Play, The Hut and Amazon could move to other offshore tax havens.

“For many years we have said we would like to see a level playing field,” said Fox.“Unfortunately, the legislation closes down Low Value Consignment Relief [LVCR] only from the Channel Islands. It remains to be seen what our competitors will do, but undoubtedly there’ll be a temptation to go to Switzerland or wherever.

“It can’t be helpful to have your VAT rate as a determinant of where you put your warehouse. It’s a basic distortion to fair competition. The closing of LVCR rules is a good thing, but the way it has been implemented doesn’t necessarily solve anything.

“[The situation] is absolutely nuts. Just as it’s nuts for digital service providers – like iTunes and Amazon Kindle – to be located in low tax locations. 

“Unfortunately, all of the high growth digital markets are not delivering the Government tax revenue. It is absolutely idiotic.”

See more here:
HMV slams 'idiotic' offshore tax dodging

Indians are the largest depositors in banks abroad with an estimated $500 billion (nearly Rs 24.5 lakh crore) of illegal money stashed by them in tax havens, the CBI director said on Monday.

India, in particular, has suffered from the flow of illegal funds to tax havens such as Mauritius, Switzerland, Lichtenstein, British Virgin islands etc.

“It is estimated that around $500 billion of illegal money belonging to Indians is deposited in tax havens abroad.

For Rediff Realtime News On Black Money, Click Here!

Click NEXT to read further. . .

Read more from the original source:
Black money stashed by Indians: Over $500 billion!

AP Singh is tired of people calling India corrupt and holding up tax havens as models of transparency.

Singh, the director of India's Central Bureau of Investigation, gave a speech yesterday trashing the corruption ranking by Transparency International:

“Fifty-three per cent of the countries said to be least corrupt by the Transparency International Index are offshore tax havens, where most of the corrupt money goes. The tax havens include New Zealand which is ranked as the least corrupt country, Singapore ranked number five and Switzerland ranked number [nine].

“There is a lack of political will in the leading tax haven States to part with information required to trace such assets as they are all too aware of the extent to which their own economies have become geared to this flow of illegal capital from the poorer countries. India in particular has suffered from the flow of illegal funds to tax havens such as Mauritius, Switzerland, Lichtenstein, British Virgin Islands, etc.”

Singh's point comes down to whether you look at where illicit funds come from or where they go.

beyondbric's Neil Munshi's offers a counterargument, however, noting that India has declined to participate with Switzerland to track down illicit funds.

Read the rest here:
Most Of The World's 'Least Corrupt' Countries Are Offshore Tax Havens

Indians are the largest depositors in banks abroad with an estimated 500 billion US dollars (nearly Rs 24.5 lakh crore) of illegal money stashed by them in tax havens, the CBI Director said today.

India, in particular, has suffered from the flow of illegal funds to tax havens such as Mauritius, Switzerland, Lichtenstein, British Virgin islands etc.

“It is estimated that around 500 billion dollars of illegal money belonging to Indians is deposited in tax havens abroad. Largest depositors in Swiss Banks are also reported to be Indians,” CBI Director A P Singh said speaking at the inauguration of first Interpol global programme on anti-corruption and asset recovery.

He said getting information about such illegal transactions is a time taking process as investigators have to peel each layer by sending judicial requests to the country where such deposits have been made.

“53 per cent of the countries said to be least corrupt by the Transparency International Index are offshore tax havens, where most of the corrupt money goes. The tax havens include New Zealand, which is ranked as the least corrupt country, Singapore ranked number five and Switzerland number seven,” Singh said.

He said there is a lack of political will in the leading tax haven states to part with the information because they are aware of the extent to which their economies have become “geared to this flow of illegal capitals from the poorer countries.”

The CBI director said tracing, freezing, confiscation and repatriation of stolen assets is a legal challenge, a complex process which requires expertise and political will.

… contd.

Tags: Blackmoney, illegal money trail, Indian depositors, Interpol meet, nation news

Reader's Comments(5) | Post a comment

Go here to see the original:
Blackmoney: Indians have stashed over $500 bn in banks abroad, says CBI

Home > News > india-news

New Delhi, Feb 13 : CBI Director Amar Pratap Singh today said Indians are the largest depositors of black money in foreign banks and about 500 billion US dollars or about Rs 24.5 lakh crore of illegal money has been stashed away by Indians in tax havens.

''India, in particular, has suffered from the flow of illegal funds to tax haven countries such as Switzerland, Lichtenstein, British Virgin islands, Mauritius and others,'' he said speaking at the inauguration of first Interpol global programme on anti-corruption and asset recovery.

Mr Singh said the largest depositors in Swiss Banks were reportedely also Indians.

Highlighting the complex issue of jurisdiction in asset recovery, he said criminals use this very aspect to their advantage, often spreading the crime over two or more countries.

''The global financial market allows money to travel further and faster than ever before. Lack of political will in tax haven countries to part with information also adds to the challenge to trace ill-gotten assets,'' he added.

The CBI Director said getting information about such illegal transactions is a time consuming process as investigators have to peel each layer by sending judicial requests to the country where such deposits have been made.

He said tracing, freezing, confiscation and repatriation of stolen assets is a legal challenge, a complex process which requires expertise and political will.

''Managing the asset recovery investigation is complex, time consuming and costly process. Most important it requires expertise and political will. There are many obstacles to asset recovery. Not only it is a specialised legal process filled with delays and uncertainty, but there are also language barriers and a lack of trust when working with other countries,'' Mr Singh said.

He added that in some of the recent high-profile cases of corruption such as 2G spectrum scam and 2010 Commonwealth Games scam, the CBI found that money was taken to Dubai, Singapore and Mauritius from where it goes to Switzerland and other such tax havens.

Mr Singh further said systems and procedures which are opaque, complicated, centralised and discretionary are a fertile breeding ground for corruption.

He called for innovative solutions to tackle corruption as it is a complex socio-economic and cultural phenomenon.

''The support of the global community through Interpol and other multilateral organisations is essential in tackling corruption and asset recovery,'' he added.

He hoped that the Interpol's global programme will sensitise participating countries to mutual legal assistance in trans border investigations. (UNI)

Share this article at

 

 

Yearly Horoscope of 2012 for the Zodiac Sign:

 

Sagittarius     Scorpio     Libra    Virgo    Leo     Cancer     Gemini     Taurus     Aries     Pisces     Aquarius     Capricon

 

 

TOP READ ARTICLES:

Whitney Houston's body brought to New Jersey
Rosie Huntington-Whiteley named top style icon for 2012
Kim Kardashian seen on lunch date with ex Reggie Bush
Playmate Claire Sinclair gets restraining order against Hugh Hefner's son
Whitney Houston 'pulled out of bath unconscious and unresponsive'
Whitney Houston's death not surprising to some
Whitney Houston 'may have died of drink and prescription drugs'
Hudgens hates shooting underwater
Whitney Houston found under water
Madonna accused of plagiarism
Catholic League slams Minaj's Grammy gig as vulgar
Timberlake, Biel to wed?
Oprah issues apology for TV remark
Ricky Martin happy with family, return to Broadway
Don Omar to compose song for Jennifer Lopez's TV show

Read more:
500 billion US dollar stashed in tax havens by Indians : CBI

Rs 24.5 lakh cr stashed by Indians in banks abroad: CBI Press Trust of India / New Delhi Feb 13, 2012, 15:06 IST

Indians are the largest depositors in banks abroad with an estimated $500 billion (nearly Rs 24.5 lakh crore) of illegal money stashed by them in tax havens, the CBI Director said today.

India, in particular, has suffered from the flow of illegal funds to tax havens such as Mauritius, Switzerland, Lichtenstein, British Virgin islands etc.

“It is estimated that around $500 billion of illegal money belonging to Indians is deposited in tax havens abroad. Largest depositors in Swiss Banks are also reported to be Indians,” CBI Director AP Singh said speaking at the inauguration of first interpol global programme on anti-corruption and asset recovery.

He said getting information about such illegal transactions is a time taking process as investigators have to peel each layer by sending judicial requests to the country where such deposits have been made.

“Fifty three per cent of the countries said to be least corrupt by the Transparency International Index are offshore tax havens, where most of the corrupt money goes. The tax havens include New Zealand which is ranked as the least corrupt country, Singapore ranked number five and Switzerland number seven,” Singh said.

He said there is a lack of political will in the leading tax haven states to part with the information because they are aware of the extent to which their economies have become “geared to this flow of illegal capitals from the poorer countries.”

The CBI Director said tracing, freezing, confiscation and repatriation of stolen assets is a legal challenge, a complex process which requires expertise and political will.

“Managing the asset recovery investigation is complex, time consuming, costly and most importantly requires expertise and political will. There are many obstacles to asset recovery.

Not only is it a specialised legal process filled with delays and uncertainty, but there are also language barriers and a lack of trust when working with other countries,” Singh said.

He said global financial markets allow money to travel faster and further making tracking the money trail in such cases even more difficult which necessitates the organisation of such global training programs as they enhance the knowledge of investigators in tracking assets created out of corrupt and criminal acts.

Singh said criminals are using the territorial issues of investigating agencies to their advantage by spreading their crimes to at least two countries and investing in a third.

“In some of the recent important cases being investigated by the CBI such as 2G, CWG and Madhu Koda, we find that money is taken to Dubai/Singapore/Mauritius from where it goes to Switzerland and other such tax havens.

“For criminals all it involves is setting up of a few shell companies and then making layered transfers from account to another in a matter of hours as there are no boundaries in banking transactions,” he said.

He said the World Bank estimates the cross border flow of money from criminal activities and tax evasion is around $1.5 trillion of which $40 billion is bribe paid to government servants in developing countries.

Singh quoted the report to say that only $5 billion of this money has been repatriated during 15 years.

Original post:
Rs 24.5 lakh cr stashed by Indians in banks abroad: CBI

2/13/2012 8:21 AM ET
(RTTNews) – Indians have stashed an estimated $500 billion of illegal money in tax havens abroad, says chief of the country's premier investigation agency.

“It is estimated that around $500 billion of illegal money belonging to Indians is deposited in tax havens abroad. Largest depositors in Swiss Banks are also reported to be Indians,” Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) Director A.P. Singh said at the inauguration of the first Interpol global program on anti-corruption and asset recovery in the Indian capital New Delhi on Monday.

He said getting information about such illegal transactions was a time- consuming process as investigators had to peel each layer by sending judicial requests to the country where such deposits had been made.

“Fifty-three per cent of the countries said to be least corrupt by the Transparency International Index are offshore tax havens, where most of the corrupt money goes. The tax havens include New Zealand which is ranked as the least corrupt country, Singapore ranked number five and Switzerland number seven,” Singh was quoted by the PTI news agency as saying.

He said there was a lack of political will in the leading tax haven states to part with the information because they were aware of the extent to which their economies had become “geared to this flow of illegal capitals from the poorer countries.”

Singh said tracing, freezing, confiscation and repatriation of stolen assets was a legal challenge, a complex process which required expertise and political will.

“Managing the asset recovery investigation is complex, time-consuming, costly and most importantly requires expertise and political will. There are many obstacles to asset recovery. Not only is it a specialized legal process filled with delays and uncertainty, but there are also language barriers and a lack of trust when working with other countries,” he said.

Singh said the World Bank had estimated cross border flow of money from criminal activities and tax evasion around $1.5 trillion, of which $40 billion was bribe paid to government servants in developing countries.

by RTT Staff Writer

For comments and feedback: editorial@rttnews.com

Original post:
Indians Stash Over $500 Billion In Overseas Banks

New Delhi, Feb 13: 

Indians are the largest depositors in banks abroad with an estimated 500 billion US dollars (nearly Rs 24.5 lakh crore) of illegal money stashed by them in tax havens, the CBI Director said today.

India, in particular, has suffered from the flow of illegal funds to tax havens such as Mauritius, Switzerland, Lichtenstein, British Virgin Islands etc.

“It is estimated that around 500 billion dollars of illegal money belonging to Indians is deposited in tax havens abroad. Largest depositors in Swiss Banks are also reported to be Indians,” the CBI Director Mr A P Singh said speaking at the inauguration of first Interpol global programme on anti-corruption and asset recovery.

He said getting information about such illegal transactions is a time taking process as investigators have to peel each layer by sending judicial requests to the country where such deposits have been made.

“Fifty three per cent of the countries said to be least corrupt by the Transparency International Index are offshore tax havens, where most of the corrupt money goes. The tax havens include New Zealand which is ranked as the least corrupt country, Singapore ranked number five and Switzerland number seven,” Mr Singh said.

He said there is a lack of political will in the leading tax haven states to part with the information because they are aware of the extent to which their economies have become “geared to this flow of illegal capitals from the poorer countries.”

The CBI Director said tracing, freezing, confiscation and repatriation of stolen assets is a legal challenge, a complex process which requires expertise and political will.

“Managing the asset recovery investigation is complex, time consuming, costly and most importantly requires expertise and political will. There are many obstacles to asset recovery. Not only is it a specialised legal process filled with delays and uncertainty, but there are also language barriers and a lack of trust when working with other countries,” Mr Singh said.

He said global financial markets allow money to travel faster and further making tracking the money trail in such cases even more difficult which necessitates the organisation of such global training programs as they enhance the knowledge of investigators in tracking assets created out of corrupt and criminal acts.

Mr Singh said criminals are using the territorial issues of investigating agencies to their advantage by spreading their crimes to at least two countries and investing in a third.

“In some of the recent important cases being investigated by the CBI such as 2G, CWG and Madhu Koda, we find that money is taken to Dubai/Singapore/Mauritius from where it goes to Switzerland and other such tax havens. For criminals all it involves is setting up of a few shell companies and then making layered transfers from account to another in a matter of hours as there are no boundaries in banking transactions,” he said.

He said the World Bank estimates the cross border flow of money from criminal activities and tax evasion is around 1.5 trillion US dollars of which 40 billion US dollars is bribe paid to government servants in developing countries.

Mr Singh quoted the report to say that only five billion US dollars of this money has been repatriated during 15 years.

See the original post:
Indians have stashed over $ 500 b in banks abroad: CBI

India has suffered from flow of illegal funds: CBI

NEW DELHI: Indians are the largest depositors in banks abroad with an estimated 500 billion US dollars (nearly Rs 24.5 lakh crore) of illegal money stashed by them in tax havens, the CBI director said on Monday.

India, in particular, has suffered from the flow of illegal funds to tax havens such as Mauritius, Switzerland, Lichtenstein, British Virgin islands etc.

“It is estimated that around 500 billion dollars of illegal money belonging to Indians is deposited in tax havens abroad. Largest depositors in Swiss Banks are also reported to be Indians,” CBI director A P Singh said speaking at the inauguration of first interpol global programme on anti-corruption and asset recovery.

He said getting information about such illegal transactions is a time taking process as investigators have to peel each layer by sending judicial requests to the country where such deposits have been made.

“53 per cent of the countries said to be least corrupt by the Transparency International Index are offshore tax havens, where most of the corrupt money goes. The tax havens include New Zealand which is ranked as the least corrupt country, Singapore ranked number five and Switzerland number seven,” Singh said.

He said there is a lack of political will in the leading tax haven states to part with the information because they are aware of the extent to which their economies have become “geared to this flow of illegal capitals from the poorer countries.”

See more here:
Black money: Indians have stashed over $500bn in banks abroad, says CBI

NEW DELHI: Putting an official estimate on unaccounted wealth stashed in foreign havens for the first time, the Central Bureau of Investigation chief A P Singh said around $500 billion (around Rs 24 lakh crore) is deposited in foreign accounts.

Speaking at the maiden Interpol global programme on anti-corruption and asset recovery, Singh said the largest depositors in Swiss Banks are reported to be Indians.

The CBI director's disclosure may well increase pressure on the government to act against black money account-holders as UPA-II has repeatedly claimed such an estimate is not possible and has set up two committees to go into the matter. The finance ministry has not provided estimates to Parliament's standing committee on the grounds that such a calculation is not feasible.

Action against “black money” accounts is a hot-button political issue with Opposition demanding that the government move to prosecute those who have clandestinely deposited money abroad and also ensure the wealth is brought back to India. The controversy has some public resonance with the accounts suspected to be related not only to tax evasion but criminal and terror money as well.

With the Supreme Court also taking up the issue, the government has worked hard to conclude treaties with 70-odd countries, including tax havens in destinations like the Caribbean and small principalities in Europe apart from Switzerland.

The government has faced flak for not disclosing names of more than 700 account- holders in HSBC, Geneva, and several in Liechetenstein although it has said secrecy conditions prevent their disclosure. The nature of the tax avoidance treaties has meant the lists cannot be shared by income tax authorities with the enforcement directorate that can use tougher laws.

Without indicating how he arrived at the estimate of illegal Indian money abroad, Singh said India, in particular, has suffered from the flow of funds to tax havens like Mauritius, Switzerland, Lichtenstein and British Virgin islands.

“It is estimated that around $500 billion of illegal money belonging to Indians is deposited in tax havens abroad. Largest depositors in Swiss Banks are also reported to be Indians,” Singh said. There have been various estimates of Indian black money – ranging from $500 billion to $1,500 billion.

An international think-tank, Global Financial Integrity, has estimated that Rs 25 lakh crore has been illegally deposited abroad by Indians. The CBI director's statement seems to corroborate or support this estimate.

Singh said there is a lack of political will in leading tax haven states to part with the information because they are aware of the extent to which their economies have become “geared to this flow of illegal capitals from the poorer countries”.

“53% of the countries said to be least corrupt by the Transparency International Index are offshore tax havens, where most of the corrupt money goes. The tax havens include New Zealand which is ranked as the least corrupt country, Singapore ranked number five and Switzerland number seven,” he said.

Singh said tracing, freezing, confiscation and repatriation of stolen assets is a legal challenge, a complex process which requires expertise and political will. He said global financial markets allow money to travel faster and further making tracking the money trail in such cases even more difficult which necessitates such global training programmes as they enhance the knowledge of officials in tracking assets created out of corrupt and criminal acts.

The CBI chief said the World Bank estimates the cross-border flow of money from criminal activities and tax evasion is around $1.5 trillion of which $40 billion is the bribe paid to government servants in developing countries. The director said only $5 billion of this money has been repatriated during 15 years. He said criminals are using the territorial and jurisdictional limitations of the investigating agencies to their advantage by spreading their crimes to at least two countries and investing in a third.

See the original post here:
$500bn stashed in tax havens, says CBI chief

New Delhi, Feb 13 (IANS) Indians are the largest depositors in Swiss banks and have stashed away $500 billion in black money in overseas tax havens, but the government is finding it “difficult” to recover the ill-gotten wealth as other nations are not cooperating, officials said Monday.

Disclosing the estimated amount of Indian black money in foreign banks, Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) Director A.P. Singh said India suffered from the flow of illegal funds to tax havens like Mauritius, Switzerland, Lichtenstein and British Virgin Islands.

“It is estimated that around $500 billion of illegal money belonging to Indians is deposited in tax havens abroad,” he said at the opening of a six-day training programme for Interpol officers.

Minister of State for Personnel V. Narayanasamy, who inaugurated the CBI training programme, said the recovery of black money needed cooperation from other nations.

“Political will in other countries is not very encouraging. They say we are bound by laws,” the minister said.

“We are finding it difficult to bring back black money stashed away in foreign banks.”

The Indian government has drawn bitter criticism from opposition parties and activists and faced heat in the Supreme Court for its alleged failure to get back the ill-gotten wealth.

A study by the Global Financial Integrity last year estimated that $462 billion of Indian black money was parked in overseas tax havens.

The CBI chief agreed with the minister's view and said “inadequate international cooperation and bank secrecy laws” had made it difficult to trace and get back the stashed away “stolen wealth”.

“Tracing, freezing, confiscation and then repatriation of stolen assets is a legal challenge,” A.P. Singh said.

He said obstacles included “legal process filled with delays and uncertainty, language barriers and a lack of trust when working with other countries”.

The CBI chief expressed surprise that offshore tax havens were those countries which were “said to be least corrupt as per the Transparency International index”.

“Fiftythree percent of the countries said to be least corrupt are offshore tax havens, where most of the corrupt money goes. The tax havens include New Zealand, which is ranked the least corrupt country, Singapore is ranked number 5 and Switzerland number 7.”

The minister warned that tackling black money had assumed significance because terror outfits were repeatedly using innovative electronic ways to deposit wealth in tax havens “for siphoning off funds for terrorism related activities”.

The CBI director cited World Bank estimates and said the cross-border flow of money from criminal activities and tax evasion was around $1.5 trillion, of which $40 billion is bribe paid to government servants in developing countries.

He said only $5 billion of this money had been repatriated in the last 15 years.

The six-day training exercise, a first by the CBI, is being attended by 30 Interpol officers from countries like Afghanistan, Sri Lanka, Britain, China, Malaysia, the Philippines and Indonesia. This is part of Interpol's initiative on anti-corruption and asset recovery.

Read more here:
$500 billion black money hidden abroad: CBI



FireFox! Start Your Own Web Hosting Company Kids Furniture
Web Hosting Advertise Here $10 a Month Affordable web-hosting
Pierre Teilhard De Chardin




Designer Children | Prometheism | Euvolution | Transhumanism

Sign up below for the Prometheism / Designer Children Discussion Forum

Subscribe to prometheism-pgroup

Powered by us.groups.yahoo.com