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By Andrew Quinlan
October 21, 2013
The United States and other members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) have engaged for years in a hypocritical campaign to punish low-tax jurisdictions for adopting policies designed to attract capital and boost their economies. Often times these same policies are practiced by members of the OECD. As an American, I am frequently accused of being disloyal by government officials and other proponents of international bullying for pointing out this blatant double standard.
Many attack low-tax jurisdictions as serving to primarily protect “tax cheats” and deprive foreign governments of their rightful tax dollars. This view supposes that governments have first claim on all economic output. In reality, the offshore community provides tremendous benefit both to the major powers and the global economy. It exists, in other words, not to foster tax evasion but to enhance the efficient formation and distribution of capital.
Rather than unregulated as critics claim, financial centers tend to be more efficiently and effectively governed. According to an assessment by the IMF, financial centers were found to be “broadly comparable or better, on average, than other countries” when it came to meeting international standards. Academic research further shows that better-governed countries are more likely to succeed in attracting capital, whereas even low taxes do little to bring investment into the poorly administered nations, which is why the list of so-called tax havens is largely devoid of such regimes. Contrary to common attacks on low-tax jurisdictions, it takes more than just low tax rates to successfully attract foreign investment; it also takes sound rules, an honest government with minimal levels of corruption, and effective enforcement of rules and regulations.
Like any other industry, specialization in financial services allows for a better product at a lower price, and the existence of skilled investors in the offshore community who allocate resources where they are most profitable has created millions of jobs and made the world more prosperous.
Nevertheless, not everyone appreciates the tremendous benefits offered by tax competition or the low-tax jurisdictions which foster it. Some politicians simply resent outside constraints on their ability to pursue desired policies, or oppose competition for ideological reasons. They want to freely tax more, spend more and regulate more. And if that means a weaker economy then so be it, so long as everyone is stuck in the same boat.
The OECD has served since the 1990’s as the chosen vehicle of attack by large nations against their , would-be competitors. There they formed the Global Forum on Transparency and Exchange of Information for Tax Purposes, which under the guise of eliminating tax evasion has unfairly and hypocritically targeted low-tax jurisdictions with demands that they adopt uncompetitive practices. Far from promoting an even playing field, the OECD has served instead as a cartel formed to protect the interests of its membership.
For instance, the Global Forum initiated a “peer review” process where member nations would sit in judgment not only of their fellow members, but also of non-member states. An unfavorable review would result in various economics sanctions. But during the reviews, certain countries were given special treatment.
The United States is the world’s biggest tax haven, attracting more foreign capital than any other nation, in part because it does not tax passive foreign investments or report any information beyond basic deposits – itself a very recent development – to foreign governments. These are good polices on both economic and human rights grounds, but they are clearly in opposition to the stated goals of the OECD. Nevertheless, the U.S. peer review failed to acknowledge the practices.
Contrary to its policies at home, the United States has ruthlessly pursued elimination of similar practices abroad. In addition to being a major power behind the OECD cartel, the U.S. has also unilaterally passed laws like the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act, a supposed effort to target tax evasion which demands that every foreign financial institution in the world engage in a costly process of identifying and reporting on every single U.S. client, while promising stiff withholding penalties on U.S. source payments for non-compliance. The result has been international chaos, as the rest of the world scrambles to accommodate a law which even the U.S. government acknowledges will bring in a mere $800 million in new revenues per year – a measly sum compared to the nation’s $3 trillion yearly budget.
International pressure continues to grow on nation’s like Panama to forgo attractive economic policies. While the U.S. engages in fiscal bullying through laws like FATCA, the OECD is once again moving its own goalposts, demanding “automatic exchange of information” as the new “international standard.” Yet if history is anything to go by, it’s a standard that those in the special club won’t be expected to meet.
Rather than acquiesce to demands that it adopt bad policies, Panama and other smaller jurisdictions should continue to demand a level playing field. In the early 2000s, Panama stood strong as a leader in opposing the OECD’s radical agenda. With international tax bureaucrats again looking to impose their will on low-tax jurisdictions, it would be easy to roll over and accept the ever evolving demands of tax cartels. This would be a mistake. Panama’s leaders must rise to the occasion by resisting further encroachments on the nation’s fiscal sovereignty, or they may wake one day to find there is none left.
Treasury is acting without legitimate authority in pursuit of these IGA’s. So not only is it foolish for foreign governments to sign up, it is undermining the domestic political process. To add insult to injury, all of this international pain is resulting from Congressional aim at raising a pittance in tax revenues, a mere $800 million per year, or about enough only to fund the federal government at current spending levels for two hours”
By Andrew Quinlan, April 24, 2013
There are many problems with the FATCA intergovernmental agreement (IGA) process. From a US perspective, they agreements represent a subversion of the proper treaty process, an unconstitutional expansion of executive powers, and an unwise commitment to saddle US banks with expensive new reporting requirements.
From an international perspective, the IGA’s are deceptive and ill-advised. For more on this perspective, Allison Christians has a great write-up in the Cayman Financial Review that can serve as an IGA primer for those who are still confused about the process and its implications.
On Circumventing Privacy Laws
[T]he Model 1 Agreement itself comes in two flavours: non-reciprocal and reciprocal, so the Model 1 choice is an opportunity for additional decision-making. The non-reciprocal model is just that: in such an agreement, the US undertakes to do little more than refrain from immediately imposing FATCA penalties in the case of noncompliance.
The primary purpose of a Model 1-based agreement is therefore to bypass domestic confidentiality laws by interposing foreign governments as information conduits between foreign institutions and the IRS, and perhaps to make some administrative concessions with respect to the reach of FATCA.
On False Promises
[U]nder the Reciprocal Model 1, the US undertakes a few more obligations. The term “reciprocal” nevertheless belongs in quotes, because if there is one characteristic that defines the Reciprocal Model 1 IGA, it is that agreements drafted on this model will most certainly not be reciprocal for some time, if ever.
Instead, the IGA is almost comically ill-named, by its own admission: in Article 6, it states that:
The United States acknowledges the need to achieve equivalent levels of reciprocal automatic information exchange with [FATCA Partner]. The United States is committed to further improve transparency and enhance the exchange relationship with [FATCA Partner] by pursuing the adoption of regulations and advocating and supporting relevant legislation to achieve such equivalent levels of reciprocal automatic exchange.
Anyone who pays attention to tax reform (or indeed any legal reform) in the United States will not feel very optimistic for the cause of reciprocity upon reading this language. People living in jurisdictions looking to become FATCA partners might therefore wonder: when my government signs an IGA, what will it give and what will it get in return?
On US Hypocrisy
The piece concludes by laying out the hypocrisy behind US efforts to attract significant capital into the country by serving as a tax haven, while simultaneously working to prevent other nations from the same.
The message is clear that while preventing Americans from sheltering their taxes abroad might be a worthy goal for the state, it is not so clear that a preferred strategy would include eliminating those services at home in order to attract foreigners.
…[T]he US has much at stake in the global competition for foreign capital. Indeed, a report from Global Financial Integrity in 2010 found that “the three jurisdictions holding the largest amount of non-resident deposits are the United States, the United Kingdom, and the Cayman Islands,” with the US leading with over $2 trillion in private, non-resident deposits.
Moreover, the United States ranks No. 1 on the Financial Secrecy Index, which “identifies the jurisdictions that are most aggressive in providing secrecy in international finance and which most actively shun co-operation with other jurisdictions.”
This puts the United States in “the role of Switzerland” for other countries, and particularly has allowed the state of Delaware to become “the best place to hide wealth.”
In addition, as I’ve noted before, Treasury is acting without legitimate authority in pursuit of these IGA’s. So not only is it foolish for foreign governments to sign up, it is undermining the domestic political process. To add insult to injury, all of this international pain is resulting from Congressional aim at raising a pittance in tax revenues, a mere $800 million per year, or about enough only to fund the federal government at current spending levels for two hours.
Unfortunately, the IGA’s are just one of many problems associated with FATCA. The law also devastates Americans living overseas by turning them into toxic assets, and threatens America’s global economic competitiveness. Perhaps this is why Congress is beginning to show an interest in correcting its mistake, and we have reason to believe the first legislative step toward repeal may be just around the corner.
July 3, 2013, Representative Bill Posey (R-Florida) wrote a strongly worded letter to the new Treasury Secretary Jack Lew insisting that Treasury was exceeding its authority in negotiating IGAs. The letter goes on to say that the need for the IGA reflects deep flaws in FATCA itself and that the law “must be either substantially amended or repealed – See more at:
https://emergingmoney.com/bank/79984/#sthash.KM21OwKK.dpuf
By Alvaro E. Tomas
La Prensa
July 28, 2013
TRANSPARENCY REQUEST
A few days ago I attended a forum of the Panamanian Association of Business Executives (APEDE) called “Panama’s Financial Centre: threats and challenges”. The moderator, Alberto Padilla from CNN, made the mistake of starting the forum asking the panelists for opinions on whether they thought Panama was or not a money-laundering center. Furthermore, he repeated several times that Panama was regarded as a tax haven by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD). As I bit my tongue during the event, I feel the need to write this article.
In recent years, the club of 34 countries, called OECD, focused its intentions in requiring changes in the laws of the nations considered “tax havens”. Panama has not escaped this scrutiny and whether we agree or not with these requirements, the pressure led us to the signing of a tax exchange agreement that -due to our territoriality principle- does not seem to benefit us at all, and soon will force us to change laws that could reduce our competitiveness in the financial and legal service sector. This international organization, as if it was a religion, wants to impose on the world the example of their members that according to them stick to “transparency”.
Few know that this organization annually issues a report on bribery, on behalf of businessmen of its member countries, to officials of non-member countries, in order to get favorable treatment in international public tenders (OECD Working Group on Bribery Annual Report 2013). This report becomes relevant in light of its transparency policy and the fact that its members represent about 90% of direct Global foreign investment.
The 2013 annual report states that, after more than a decade, 311 companies or individuals have been sanctioned in 14 member countries for bribing foreign officials, while only 83 individuals have gone to prison. That is, 40% of its members have entrepreneurs who have actively participated in bribery, fostering corruption in developing nations. Let’s recall that the cynical, to say the least, former Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi justified this crime by declaring that bribery is necessary when dealing with third world countries and regimes…”(Financial Times, February 2013).
The report notes that in 20 nations belonging to that organization no evidence has been found that their entrepreneurs had been favored with governmental investment abroad. We might expect that in some Nordic countries, in the U.S. or in Singapore these corruption acts would not occur due to the execution of
justice or the mere possibility that the entrepreneurs would be investigated. What calls our attention is that Brazil, Mexico and Spain (members) have not prosecuted any entrepreneurs on the charges of corruption of officials.
To run its heroic mission of promoting policies and improving the welfare of planet earth, the OECD should force its partners to investigate and more aggressively prosecute entrepreneurs who go around bribing at a global scale. Otherwise, the serious and dignified receiving nations of that direct foreign investment, should blacklist the countries criticized by that organization, for their inaction at the time of fighting the corruption of its officials, preventing them from participating or bidding in governmental works and services.
Before continuing to mandate regulations to non-members, such as Panama, the OECD must understand that it is unacceptable to us that the organization does not put greater efforts to prosecute its criminals in the name of the transparency they so emphatically profess.
4/18/2011
WASHINGTON – The U.S. Department of the Treasury today announced the entry into force of a Tax Information Exchange Agreement (TIEA) with Panama. Signed November 30, 2010, and effective as of today, the TIEA represents implementation by both governments of their shared policy to improve their tax information exchange transparency networks globally.
The TIEA will permit the United States and Panama to seek information from each other on all types of national taxes in both civil and criminal matters for tax years beginning on or after November 30, 2007.
Last year, Panama amended its domestic law to empower the government to obtain and exchange information to comply with international conventions (including TIEAs) even when such information is not of domestic tax interest (Law 33, published in Panama’s Official Gazette on June 30, 2010). In addition, Panama amended its law to address the practice of anonymous accounts known as “Bearer Shares” by requiring the law firms that incorporate businesses to conduct due diligence to verify the identity of the owners and to share that information with Panamanian authorities upon request (Law 2, “Know your Client,” published in the Official Gazette on February 1, 2011).
The agreement with Panama is the latest of several recent TIEAs to enter into force, including the U.S.-Monaco TIEA (March 11, 2010); the U.S.-Gibraltar TIEA (December 22, 2009); and the U.S.-Liechtenstein TIEA (December 4, 2009).
https://www.treasury.gov/press-center/press-releases/Pages/tg1144.aspx
By Andrew Quinlan
Brian Garst
Published on Harbour Times
May 9, 2013
The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) has tried numerous strategies to compel low-tax nations to raise tax rates and eliminate financial privacy, or to otherwise make their tax systems less attractive. Countries like Hong Kong have been bombarded with threats of blacklisting and economic sanctions, all designed to wear down the willpower of lawmakers who might otherwise prefer competitive, pro-growth tax policies. As Hong Kong officials consider acquiescing to the latest round of OECD demands through implementation of a framework for Tax Information Exchange Agreements (TIEA) and potential new agreements with the U.S. and others, they should consider that the next hoops through which they will be expected to jump are already being constructed.
Efforts to amend Inland Revenue rules to allow for exchange of information through the TIEAs without requiring a double taxation agreement are understandable. The OECD, after all, has essentially come strolling by to say, “That’s a nice economy you have there, Hong Kong, shame if something were to happen to it.”
But like most bullies, the OECD is unlikely to back off once appeased. Through examination of the organization’s history, and careful observation of current trends, it is apparent that demands for further concessions will quickly follow even once Hong Kong has met its TIEA quota.
Understanding the OECD’s Agenda
The OECD began its campaign on behalf of high-tax nations with a 1998 report entitled, “Harmful Tax Competition: An Emerging Global Issue.”The report made clear that the OECD’s Committee on Fiscal Affairs was beholden to a radical theory called capital export neutrality (CEN), which concludes that all differences in tax rates should be eliminated, along with the ability of taxpayers to protect themselves from confiscatory rates by shifting economic activity to jurisdictions with better tax policies.
In the face of considerable push back spearheaded by the Center for Freedom and Prosperity (CF&P) at a high-level consultation meeting held in Barbados in 2001, the 1998 report eventually led only to formation of the Global Forum on Transparency and Exchange of Information. Unable to find enough support for direct tax harmonization, the focus shifted to information sharing, along with the threat of economic sanctions and penalties to compel low-tax nations to adopt bad tax policy.
A somewhat recent example of skullduggery does much to illuminate the aims of the OECD’s Global Forum. In 2009 at the Mexico City Global Forum meeting, the organization unilaterally asserted the power to impose rules restricting tax avoidance and other legal forms of tax planning. It might not be obvious why a body claiming to be concerned about tax evasion would make such a move, but CEN theory considers tax avoidance to be just as bad as evasion. Any competition, in other words, puts pressure on politicians not to tax excessively.
At the second day of the 2009 meeting, organizers tried to sneak a startling provision into the “summary of outcomes.”The draft circulated on the first day began simply, “The main objectives of the meeting are…”Whereas by the second morning it read, “In the context of the broader effort to fight tax evasion and avoidance and to remove harmful tax practices that facilitate such activities, the main objectives of the meeting are…”
When low-tax jurisdictions objected to the new language and its conflation of evasion and avoidance, CF&P watched as their high-tax counterparts sought to stall or move on to other topics. But because low-tax jurisdictions stood strong, the language was eventually forced to be removed. Surprisingly enough, China was instrumental in the effort to stop this particular OECD power grab.
What They’ll Demand Next
Just two years after the Mexico City incident and at the 2011 Global Forum in Bermuda, the OECD sought again to undermine tax planning with the unveiling of the Multilateral Convention on Administrative Assistance in Tax Matters.
The Multilateral Convention itself was not new, but it was radically altered in 2010 and given a renewed focus. The Convention serves to obligate signatories to become deputy tax collectors for every other nation that joins, while granting the OECD enormous powers as the “co-ordinating body”to interpret the agreement and resolve disputes.
With the OECD serving as sole arbiter for the Convention, the result of widespread adoption would be the creation of what amounts to a World Tax Organization. Allowing foreign tax collectors to cross borders will mean the end of tax competition and result in higher tax burdens throughout the world.
In its April 19th, 2013 Communiqué, the G20 Meeting of Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors wrote that they “strongly encourage all jurisdictions to sign or express interest in signing the Multilateral Convention on Mutual Administrative Assistance in Tax Matters and call on the OECD to report on progress.”But when it comes to the OECD, today’s strong encouragement is likely to be tomorrow’s mandate. Or else.
The U.S. Sets a Bad Example
Compounding the OECD threat are U.S. efforts to strong-arm the world into serving as its own private army of deputy tax collectors. Since passage of the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) in 2010, the U.S. Treasury Department has sought to entice foreign governments into enforcing a law too poorly written to otherwise work.
FATCA requires foreign financial institutions to report on their U.S. account holders to the IRS, or face a stiff 30% withholding penalty on U.S. source payments. But working directly with every foreign institution in the world has proven to be a tall order for Treasury, which has opted instead to negotiate directly with foreign governments, without authorization from Congress, in the hopes that they will collect and report on U.S. client information. Foreign governments are being asked to sign intergovernmental agreements (IGAs), compelling them to enforce FATCA on their domestic institutions and remove any conflicting privacy laws.
To convince foreign governments to do their work for them, the U.S. Treasury Department has promised reciprocation, but hasn’t the statutory authority to deliver. Congress would have to authorize reciprocal information sharing, and that is simply not likely to happen. The U.S. has long had a policy of attracting foreign investment to the U.S., and could ill afford the economic consequences of driving away significant sums of foreign investment.
Just this week, Senator Rand Paul introduced legislation that would repeal FATCA. The only thing keeping the legislation on the books is the fact that some foreign government are signing the IGA’s with the Treasury Department and relinquishing their sovereign fiscal authority to the United States.
By itself FATCA would be bad enough, but high-tax nations are beginning to use it as an example to follow. The UK is pursuing “son of FATCA”arrangements with the Crown Dependencies, while other European nations are pushing for a broader, or worldwide, FATCA system. The OECD has even weighed in to praise a multilateral FATCA agreement reached by the U.S. with France, Germany, Italy, Spain and the UK. How long before acceptance of FATCA becomes the next international standard required by the OECD?
What’s Best for Hong Kong?
In a letter addressing questions from Legislative Council, Hong Kong’s Financial Services and the Treasury Bureau promises to protect taxpayers’ privacy and confidentiality by, among other things, only exchanging information upon receipt of request, saying specifically that “no information will be exchanged on an automatic or spontaneous basis.”
Automatic exchange may not be necessary to placate the OECD at this time, but it is precisely what they want. The organization already provides a toolkit to assist governments in establishing automatic exchange, and has all but endorsed the concept in numerous reports. The recent G20 Communiqué furthermore stated that they “welcome progress made towards automatic exchange of information,”and tellingly added, “which is expected to be the standard and urge all jurisdictions to move towards exchanging information automatically.”
Hong Kong policymakers must now decide what is in the best interests of Hong Kong as they once again consider altering their legal tax framework at the behest of the OECD. With a pro-growth system that doesn’t try to tax beyond its borders, Hong Kong gains nothing directly through information sharing, but thanks to OECD bullying the nation understandably must consider adopting measures to meet whatever happens to be the so-called international standard of the day. But lawmakers should also consider that the OECD is constantly moving the goalposts – as soon as one requirement is satisfied, two more are created.
If Hong Kong is serious about holding on to principles like financial privacy, there will soon come a time when the international standard as defined by high-tax nations will require a very hard decision. Like most bullies, the OECD doesn’t handle resistance well. Standing up to the OECD is the only strategy that has proven effective. Simply put, leaders in Hong Kong can either draw a line in the sand against the OECD today, draw a line in the future, or toss their principles out the door. Ultimately, the OECD will settle for nothing less.
By Carlos Ernesto González Ramírez
Published on La Estrella de Panamá
April 30th, 2013
For over a decade Panama has suffered the attacks of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, an international organization formed by a group of countries to which Panama does not belong, dedicated to ensure the economic development of its members, as its name explains.
Although the OECD argues that it attacks Panama to prevent tax evasion by the taxpayers of its member countries, the truth is that it actually attacks us to avoid the commercial competition that Panama and other countries represent due to the uptake of international capitals. I make this statement based on the incongruity of the message OECD itself.
Indeed, the leading countries of the OECD (U.S. and the EU) for years have promoted international openness and trade liberalization. More recently they have indicated that trade protectionism should be rejected because this would negatively affect the world economy. Parallel to this, some members of the OECD, most prominently the U.S. and the UK, maintain differential tax regimes for domestic and residents versus non-resident foreigners, tax exempting the latter, while maintaining fiscal and economic information reservation mechanisms for these people.
In fact, the U.S. cannot, by reason of their constitutional law and economic interest, exchange economic information of any person without a court order based on strong evidence that points to the commission of a crime (which may be a tax offense). The economic interest in attracting international capital is so great that when the U.S. Treasury tried to promote legislation that would force the country’s banks to exchange information with foreign countries about the interest that banks paid to nationals of those countries, the banking system and an important sector of the U.S. Congress opposed and defeated the initiative demonstrating the impact it would have on said system in the country.
This situation contrasts with what has happened recently with the G-20, whose meeting launched the idea of making the automatic exchange of tax information an international standard. Obviously, countries that pride themselves on caring about individual freedom will have problems with this standard. Especially the U.S., since I do not understand how they will be able to meet this standard without violating their constitutional norms, situation that also happens in Panama.
So if they say ‘do as I say and not as I do’, the only logical explanation for their behavior is to avoid commercial competition. This explanation is, besides, supported by empirical reality. Just read the OECD’s original document that gives rise to this initiative, ‘Harmful Tax Competition’, published in 1998 and available on the web.
Added to this are the measures that supposedly could be taken against countries like Panama, all of which are in violation of International Trade Law, and standards. In other words, under the tax excuse, they are acting in violation of International Law, without their supposed standards being part of a Public International Law norm.
For this reason, Panama should move the debate to the correct forum: trade. This debate should be in the hands of the Ministry of Trade and Industry and not the Ministry of Economy and Finance. In the fiscal logic, the country loses. In Public International Trade Law, the country wins. It’s as simple as it is difficult: difficult, because it requires strength and determination, simple, because the Law is on our side.
Por Derek Sambrook
The late British novelist Roald Dahl wrote: “And above all, watch with glittering eyes the whole world around you because the greatest secrets are always hidden in the most unlikely places”. He goes on to say that: “Those who don’t believe in magic will never find it”. Well, you don’t have to believe in magic to find hidden secrets in unlikely places as you will hear. Secrecy is, and will remain, part of the fabric – or fabrication – of life.
https://sites.morimor.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/20/2013/05/Offshore-Investment-Conference-Secrecy-is-it-dead.pdf
By Carlos Ernesto González Ramírez
Pubished on La Prensa
29/04/2013
NOTICES OF ILLEGALITY
The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) consists of a group of developed nations, -other countries have no access unless they are invited- whose objective is the economic development of its member states. To this end, this organization has been studying ways to mitigate the negative impact that international competition has on its partners’ interests. Among what they identify as harmful are financial centers outside of its borders and tax competition (fundamental tool for economic development of modern nations, including those of the OECD).
In 1998, the group published a study, Harmful Tax Competition, which stated that globalization and technology were affecting financial centers within their borders, because the ones they call off shore represented unfair competition. The arguments of efficiency and disloyalty of their competitors were sustained by pointing out what little regulation is applied to them, compared with their highly-regulated (and therefore more expensive) centers, and the lower or nonexistent tax levels. Therefore, they had to pressure these countries (not members of their club), to comply with such regulations and exchange tax information, although these did not represent any benefit to them and, on the contrary, would end up destroying their financial centers.
At first they wanted to show that the issue could be handled with objective criteria, but when they tried to define what was a tax haven, they realized that under any objective definition, its most important members also have to be labeled as such. Given this reality, they decided to change tactics and make subjective lists and avoid objective definitions. This also allowed them to create new criteria for alleged international tax cooperation standards.
To give overtones of “legitimacy” to their efforts, they summoned non-members to become part of a “forum” that would assign responsibilities that participants would accept (the so-called Global Forum on Transparency and Tax Information Exchange). Obviously, as objective criteria are dangerous for them, they neither made a full-fledged international organization nor articles of incorporation were established. Moreover, they have not published their rules anywhere. Thus, since they do not exist in the legal world, they could coerce countries to participate, bypassing traditional democratic processes. That is, they would become members of a forum that has no objective rules, which criteria is controlled by the OECD and would not require formal approval, as an international treaty.
To further control the useful fools dazzled by a little meeting at the OECD, they invented a “Peer Review” of the compliance with shifting standards of the “members” country (no rules, again). With that name it would seem that those who attend the forum also participate in the peer review, but it turns out not to be the case. This review is done by a group of 30 selected countries: 15 OECD (half), eight high-tax jurisdictions (such as Argentina and Brazil), four current colonies of members of the organization (the only ones with regimens similar to Panama), and three with undefined positions.
For the above reason, for example, when checking the existence of bearer shares in the UK, this country simply states that it has them, but that it is of no significant impact or relevance (with 15 votes plus the colonies, the OECD members have secured their passage through the review). In my opinion, any decent country should refuse to participate in this farce, unless, previously, it was constituted as an international organization and its creation was approved in a way required by the constitution: the National Assembly (in the case of Panama).
In fact, officials involved in these meetings do not have legislation supporting them, which can end up in the deviation of power, given that public officials can only do what the laws allow them to do. Therefore, until there is a treaty establishing clear and objective rules for all participants, which has been approved by the National Assembly, the Ministry of Economy and Finance must refrain from participating in this mess.
It is the responsibility of the country to respect the international standards established and developed through formal essential procedures. It is through international law that small countries have the ability to defend their interests. This should be the position that must be communicated to the OECD and the only legitimate one for any government.
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