Title: OECD Views on Tax Competition: A Critical Appraisal
1OECD Views on Tax Competition A Critical
Appraisal
- Montreal
- 17 September 2007
- Richard J HaySTIKEMAN ELLIOTT LLP
2Presentation Summary
- key elements of tax competition
- OECD and the politics of tax competition
- Harmful tax competition
- OECD and tax havens
- DTAs as an antidote for the cross-border tax
barriers
3Elements of Tax Competition
- rate
- base (income or consumption, scope)
- reach (worldwide or territorial)
- model (redistributive?)
- international interface
4OECD
- consensus process
- 30 sovereign members
- US / Europe are the principal constituencies
- generally pro competition in its work
- non-members are designated as participating
partners in its work on tax competition
5US Policy on Tax Competition
- US states have long tradition of competition in
tax / company law - US taxes are 27 of GDP
- Europe averages 38 of GDP in tax
- 2001 Republican criticism of OECD Harmful Tax
Competition Initiative triggers change of policy
(and Report name) - 2002-2004 US concern over corporate inversions
into Bermuda
6EU Policy on Tax Competition
- diverse and complex
- tax competition seen as compensation for
geographic or structural differences (Madeira,
Ireland, Luxembourg) - offensive or defensive measures?
- EU Code of Conduct condemns ring fencing
(contrast US / OECD position) - salami slicing is permitted
- general low tax rates are acceptable (e.g.
Ireland)
7OECD Approach to Tax Competition
- 1998 Harmful Tax Competition Report
- concerns over poaching the tax base that
rightly belongs to another country - countries are free to design their own tax
systems - which abide by internationally accepted
standards - tax information exchange (on request)
8Harmful Tax Competition
- eroding the tax bases of other countries
- diverting mobile investment from one country to
another - distorting trade and investment patterns
- failing to provide tax data for enforcement by
other countries - project focus on information exchange by havens
9OECD and Tax Havens
- 1987 Any country can be a tax haven in relation
to a particular situation. Attempts to provide a
definition are bound to be unsuccessful - 1997 no or nominal taxes are a necessary (but
not sufficient) indication of tax haven. Havens
are identified and listed - 2002 commitments to transparency and information
exchange - 2006 OECD Report on Level Playing Field
10Top Global Economies, GDP per person2006
estimate, 000
SOURCE CIA World Factbook
11The Rap Sheet on Tax Havens
- world tax rates are forced down by unfair tax
competition - havens are predatory, distorting global economic
activity - havens impoverish developed countries,
jeopardising tax funding for public services - havens shift tax burdens from corporations to
individuals
12More for lessCorporate tax rates versus Revenues
in developed countries
13Tax Competition Boon or Bane?
- effective competitors are always an irritant to
other market participants - competition is a healthy, liberalising force
- tax competition promotes discipline and
efficiency in public sector expenditure - does competition from low tax jurisdictions
increase economic activity in neighbouring states?
14Tax Competition and Double Tax Agreements
- tax competition and barriers to cross border
commerce - tax information exchange agreements vs. DTAs
- will tax havens normalise relations with OECD
states as they adopt international tax and
regulatory standards? - should tax barriers be lowered for tax havens to
permit full tax competition? - Canadian proposals are seen as novel and
interesting
15DTAs and Low / No Tax Jurisdictions
- should OECD countries do DTAs with low/no tax
centres? - the UAE experience
- DTA relief is generally available between OECD
countries for untaxed income in participation
regimes, and for tax exempts - OECD may find it easier to work with its
participating partners if there is an exchange
of value
16OECD and Tax Competition
- fair tax competition is encouraged, but what is
fair? - differing views in a complex political context
- level playing field is a greater problem than
anticipated - will OECD encourage its members to lower tax
barriers for smaller countries as they facilitate
tax information exchange?
17QUESTIONS ANSWERS
- Richard Hayrhay_at_stikeman.comSTIKEMAN ELLIOTT
LLP www.stikeman.com