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Despite a din
of protests from the New York Times and the Washington Post, the Bush
administration refused to support an attempt by the Organization for
Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) to clamp down on tax
havens. Fronting for about 30 high-tax governments, the Paris-based
organization has been leaning on jurisdictions like the Cayman Islands,
Bermuda, and the Isle of Man. If the junta of high-tax governments has
its way, not only will there be no place left to run to, but by
eliminating what tax havens offer, these governments will have
eliminated tax competition, and with it the imperative to downsize their
fiefdoms.
In a paper
deceptively entitled Promoting
Tax Competition, OECD überbureaucrats Jeffrey Owens and Richard M.
Hammer of Fiscal Affairs build their case against the tax haven. Their
starting point is, of course, the implicit understanding that laws
regulating how people use their rightful capital are just laws. Our
authors grant that property owners ought to be allowed to do that which
they do naturally -- namely, invest their capital where it will yield
the best returns. But this must be done "without impeding the aim
of national governments to meet the legitimate expectations of their
citizens." Freedom to make economic decisions must be tempered by
the OECD governments' ongoing confiscatory agenda.
The OECD
skillfully adopts the language of the anti-globalization camp to agitate
against tax havens. Globalization is good, say the writers, but not when
the benefits are unequally shared. The OECD frames an alleged
"world-wide reduction in welfare" as the consequences of
"... tax-induced distortions in capital and financial flows."
This anti-globalization choice of rhetoric is understandable. If
anything, the OECD's efforts are in keeping with government
globalization. In advancing the aims of an accretive bureaucracy, what
better ally to court than the anti-globalization crowd, with its equal
enthusiasm for unbounded state powers? Business, of course, needs no
co-opting. Historically, it has always been on the side of government
taxation and regulations, because these hamper nascent competition.
This official
line omits that wealth in the hands of its rightful owners enriches all
sectors of the population more than funds in the sticky paws of
officials. Using a sample of 92 countries, David Dollar and Aart Kraay,
authors of a study entitled Growth Is Good for the
Poor, offer evidence
that when average incomes rise, the average income of the poorest fifth
of society rise proportionately. The study spans four decades, and
yields results that hold across regions, periods, income levels and
growth rates. By extension, the same effect must hold good whether the
reason for a rise in real income is higher earnings or less taxation.
Clearly, keeping more of one's income is not "harmful" to the
rightful owners of capital, or to the beneficiaries of its investment,
which include any and all bar the taxman.
Although the
OECD's meddling gives an impression to the contrary, a tax haven is a
sovereign territory that does not levy taxes, or levies them at
non-punitive rates. Sometimes these countries opt to tax only domestic
-- but not foreign -- income. The economy of the tax haven depends to a
large degree on the banking and financial sectors. With this come
imperatives such as financial privacy and secrecy.
Hell-bent on
forcing low- or no-tax nations to suspend their financial privacy laws,
and impelling them, through the threat of sanctions, to provide
information to foreign tax collectors, the OECD has set about framing
their practices as harmful, if not criminal. With the aid of the media,
tax havens have been depicted as cauldrons of counterfeiting and money
laundering (a strange accusation coming from governments whose national
banks regularly inflate the money supply and dilute with fiat money the
value of people's assets).
To be guilty
of "harmful tax practices," says the OECD, a country must be
an area of "no or nominal effective tax rates." The OECD
further suggests that a haven transgresses when it is bereft of
"transparency" and "effective exchange of
information." By demanding information exchange when this defies a
tax haven's own laws, the OECD disregards the comity of nations in
international law -- the courtesy by which one nation respects and
recognizes the laws of another. This principle implies deference and
goodwill towards the legislative, judicial and executive acts of another
country. It is uncivil, not to mention coercive, for the OECD to force
tax havens to prostrate their laws before those of the aggressor
governments.
Another
weapon in the OECD's bully-boy arsenal is its hit list, entitled
"List of Unco-operative Tax Havens." So far the OECD is
gunning for only "35 jurisdictions identified as meeting the tax
haven criteria," but fully 45 jurisdiction are deemed sufficiently
irksome to the OECD as to warrant the term "potentially
harmful." Of course, these jurisdictions are manifestly not
"harmful" to their inhabitants and clients. Nevertheless, they
are now the objects of assorted cold war tactics called the "common
framework of defensive measures."
Having
sidelined sovereignty and international law, and having all but
criminalized certain financial practices, the OECD proceeds to demand
that these practices be "rolled back" and eliminated.
Sanctuaries such as Bermuda, the Cayman Islands, Cyprus, Malta,
Mauritius and San Marino are rolling over. In eerily uniform official
letters to the Secretary-General of the OECD, the kind that read like
coerced confessions, the respective representatives all promise to
implement the OECD's recommendations and follow, if necessary, with
legislation of their own to end privacy and facilitate "exchange of
information in tax matters."
The OECD's
statist overreach must be seen in the context of an increasingly
centralized Europe. Europeans are being herded by stealth into a
supranational European State. With a vision predicated on rigid central
planning, homogenization of laws throughout the continent, and heavy
taxation and inflation of the money supply, the EU's putsch can't but
evoke unfavourable comparisons.
From its
equally suspect quarters, the UN is pushing for an international tax
collection organization, for global taxes, and for an emigrant tax. This
master plan will have individuals cornered by governments and paying a
ransom if and when they wish to exit a particular jurisdiction. The UN
plans for governments the world over to be able to tax income earned
outside their borders (something the United States already does), the
outcome of which will be a well-co-ordinated confiscation of private
property.
The OECD no
more reflects the "will of the people" than does the EU or the
UN, although, like them, it hides behind the same democratic bafflegab.
The EU does not speak for Europe's diverse 374 million people. And apart
from its bureaucrats, nobody knows for whom the UN speaks. Still less
does the OECD represent any more than a cartel of enforcers for high-tax
governments. Ironically, any corporation that acted like that would be
prosecuted under antitrust law.
©2001 By
Ilana Mercer
The
Financial
Post
September 4 |