Reversing earlier moves taken this summer and fall, a major
international bank is ending its cooperation with the Internal Revenue
Service’s efforts to prevent investors from investing money in foreign
countries with more amenable tax structures and policies, such as
Ireland or Switzerland.
During a Zurich speech, Barclays bank executive Francesco Grosoli
announced that the firm’s Swiss operations had “recently exited the
program,” after evaluating its legal options. Grosoli declined to reveal
additional details, but said that the bank had decided to end
compliance with the U.S. extra-territorial enforcement actions at some
point within the last “three or four months.”
Deputy Tax Collectors
The program, organized
under FATCA, requires foreign
banks to provide confidential information to the IRS. Non-compliance
carries heavy penalties levied upon foreign firms, with fines as high as
half of the value of the American assets in question.
Announcing the law’s passage in 2010, President Barack Obama warned
the world’s banking industry that if they did not “cooperate with us, we
will assume that they are sheltering money in tax havens and act
accordingly.”
Since the law’s passage, 25 bank employees have been accused of
helping clients evade taxes. Two of Switzerland’s top banks, UBS and
Credit Suisse, have paid fines of over $3 billion combined, while dozens
of other bank are still under investigation.
Another international bank, HBSC, settled with the United States
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The bank’s clients were not
properly registered, the SEC alleged, and HBSC employees made at least
40 visits to the U.S. to meet with clients.
The U.S. Department of Justice is still investigating whether HBSC was helping Americans engage in tax evasion.
Dropping Out
Although Barclays is currently the
only Swiss bank to have announced its non-compliance with the program, but foreign banks’
refusal to hand over their customers’ data to the Internal Revenue
Service (IRS) is understandable.
“Banks are subjected to very costly regulations and are put in an
unpalatable position of acting as deputy enforcers for the IRS, even
though that may violate the human rights laws on privacy in other
countries,”
Lack of cooperation between high- and low-tax jurisdictions is not a
new economic development, as countries such as
Switzerland have traditionally respected investors’ privacy.
“Low-tax, privacy-respecting jurisdictions have always existed. They
first became ‘havens’ for human rights or political freedom,” Successful people in some European nations put their money
in places like Geneva to avoid confiscation, expropriation, or
discrimination in their home countries.”
As opposed to generating tax revenue by increasing the difficulty of
placing money in other countries, the U.S. should
instead seek to make its own tax structure more attractive to investors.
“The entire issue is solved with the right kind of tax reform,” “If we no longer double-taxed saving and investment, and no
longer had extra-territorial taxation, then it wouldn’t matter if people
had their money in a bank in in Georgetown, Cayman Islands, or
Georgetown, Kentucky.”
Good Ideas, Bad Ideas
In addition to providing
additional investment options for individuals, empirical evidence says
that investor-friendly tax rules have significant positive economic
benefits.
In 2004, University of Michigan Richard A. Musgrave Collegiate
Professor of Economics James R. Hines Jr. reviewed empirical data on
economic indicators of high-tax and low-tax countries. Most notably,
Hines noted that “tax haven countries as a group exhibited 3.3 percent
annual per capita GDP growth from 1982-1999, whereas the world averaged
just 1.4 percent annual GDP growth over the same period.”
“Even very low rates of direct taxation of business investment may
yield significant tax revenues if economic activity expands in response,
producing wealth and expenditure that augment tax bases,” Hines
explains in the study.
Hines’ study concludes that “countries are not randomly selected to
be tax havens; tax policies are choices that governments make on the
basis of economic and other considerations”—an observation with which I would certainly agree with.
“In other words, so-called tax havens exist because of bad policy
choices—with tax just being part of the mix—in other nations.”
In addition to benefitting investors and haven countries’ economies,
academic studies have found evidence that the benefits of friendly tax
policy spill across borders, boosting the economic health of countries
neighboring haven countries.
In 2004, Havard
University Business School Mizuho Financial Group Professor of Finance
Mihir A. Desai, examined data from American multinational firms’ tax
haven usage.
In the study, Desai wrote “the evidence also
indicates that use of tax havens indirectly stimulates the growth of
operations in non-haven countries in the same region,” as “Careful use
of tax haven affiliates permits foreign investors to avoid some of the
tax burdens imposed by countries with high tax rates, thereby
maintaining foreign investment at levels exceeding those that would
persist if tax havens were unavailable.”
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