It's Friday. The topic is
financial. It's FRIDAY FINANCIAL with our resident expert JULIAN SAYER.
Poor people pay
taxes and rich people avoid paying tax. How the hell can that be right? Read on
. . .
MIND THE GAP . .
.
It's killing you!
MILLIONS of people
have an uneasy feeling that something is not right in the global economy –
As I mentioned in
last week's blog, the middle and working classes have endured ten years of a
reducing real income, while the super-rich have got richer. The tax burden is
forever increasing on the people who can least afford to pay, while the wealthy
and multinational corporations are paying less and less. This scenario is
widening the income inequality gap, and is the root cause of the social
breakdown.
Governments have
to raise tax in order to pay for the services a society needs. The more tax
they can generate the better the services and pensions they can provide. If tax
revenues start to decline, then those services have to be cut. If you really
want the breakdown of how much the UK and where it raises these taxes from, you
can find it here.
Tax avoidance has
become a real issue of late and has to be tackled if you want an equitable
society. Corporation tax avoidance is the one that has made the headlines, with
companies such as Google, Amazon, Vodafone and Apple making billions in
turnover but paying very little in tax.
It is estimated
the Inland Revenue is losing £5.5 billion a year through such tax avoiding
schemes. The TUC, having done its own analysis, claims that £12bn of tax a year
may be being lost from the UK's 700 largest corporations, thanks to planning
and avoidance. It looked at the accounts of just the top 50 companies over a
seven-year period. This is known as "the tax gap". As the tax gap
gets bigger, the Government has to raise its taxes from elsewhere, or cut
services. That means higher taxes on middle England, the easy target.
I could talk to
you about, income, VAT, inheritance, and corporation tax, but they are all just
side issues to the real disease that is causing the world the greatest
problems, the issue of tax havens.
Tax havens are
nations that offer favourable tax treatment to assets held within their
boundaries; often offering zero or near-zero tax rates with very few questions
asked. Bermuda, the British Virgin Islands, Dubai and even the tiny UK Channel
Island of Jersey are just a few of the places that host corporate entities and
trusts created by the world's wealthy and powerful to shield their money from
taxes in their home-country.
Tax havens are
not exotic, murky sideshows at the fringes of the world economy: they lie at
its centre. Half of world trade flows - at least on paper - through tax havens.
Every multinational corporation uses them routinely. The biggest users of tax
havens by far are not terrorists, spivs, celebrities or Mafiosi – but banks.
Tax havens are
the ultimate source of strength for the global powers. In these fortified areas
of secret, unaccountable political and economic power, financial and criminal
interests have come together to capture local political systems and turn the
havens into their own private law-making factories, protected against outside
interference by the world’s most powerful countries – most especially the
relationship between the UK and its Government. It is estimated that more than
$20 trillion acquired by wealthy individuals could lie in offshore accounts.
Now, if that was taxed at even the lowest rate, that the rest of us mere
mortals have to pay (let's say 20% for ease of maths) that's a staggering $4
trillion that Governments could use to benefit society.
Tax havens aren’t
just about tax. They are about escape – escape from criminal laws, escape from
creditors, escape from tax, escape from prudent financial regulation – above
all, escape from democratic scrutiny and accountability. Tax havens get rich by
taking fees for providing these escape routes. This is their core line of
business. It is what they do.
Poverty in
Africa? Offshore is at the heart of the matter. Industrial-scale corruption and
the wholesale subversion of governments by criminalised interests, across the
developing world? Offshore is central to the story, every time. The systematic
looting of the former Soviet Union and the merging of the nuclear-armed
country’s intelligence apparatus with organized crime, is a story that unfolds
substantially in London and its offshore satellites. Saddam Hussein used tax
havens to buttress his power, as does North Korea’s Kim Jong-Il today. The Elf Affair, Europe’s biggest ever
corruption scandal, had secrecy jurisdictions at its core. Arms smuggling to
terrorist organisations? The growth of mafia empires? Offshore. You can only
fit about $1 million into a briefcase: without offshore, the illegal drugs
trade would be a fraction of its size. Just look at the recent HSBC money
laundering scandal of South American drug cartels.
Private equity
and hedge funds? Goldman Sachs? Citigroup? These are all creatures of offshore.
The scandals of Enron, Parmalat, Long Term Capital Management, Lehman Brothers,
AIG — and many more? Tax havens lay behind them all. The rise of
multinationals, the explosion of debt in advanced economies since the 1970s is
substantially an offshore tale. Complex monopolies, frauds, insider trading
rings — these corruptions of free markets always have tax havens at their
heart.
Tax havens are
defrauding every citizen in every country, even the poorest and most vulnerable
are being sucked dry by the leeches of tax evasion.
As a side note I
see Forbes announced this year’s rich list this week.
The world’s
richest in ascending order from tenth to first place are:
• Jim Walton $34.7B
USA
• Christie Walton $36.7B USA
• Sheldon Adelson $38B
USA
• David Koch $40B
USA
• Charles Koch $40B
USA
• Larry Ellison $48B
USA
• Warren Buffet $58.2B
USA
• Amancio Ortega $64B
Spain
• Carlos Slim Helu $72B
Mexico
• Bill Gates $76B
USA
Just a thought? I
wonder how many of them actually pay tax? Or if they manage to get around all
of that by some wicked web that has been woven. One thing tells me that if they
are officially worth that much, then one they might not have that in the bank
at their disposal. Secondly, they might well have double that amount. People
never declare what they have or own down to the last penny, do they? The 11th
person on that rich list is Liliane Bettencourt, heiress of L’Oreal. Back in
2011 she got around paying more than 4% in tax on her wealth. She now has $34.5
billion somewhere (officially), although she has got herself embroiled in a
scandal with ex-President Nicolas Sarkozy about illegally financing his
election campaign and in return (so the rumour goes) getting out of paying any
tax altogether.
I hope the above
illustrates how the Government, Big Business and super rich are milking the
system for themselves. The rich will get richer, and the big corporations will
get bigger. Nothing will change until the tax system changes. The tax system
won't change no matter who you vote for.
FEEL IT? LOVE IT? THEN SHARE IT!
Exactly
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