$1.5 trillion of assets move through the British
Virgin Islands — twice as much as previously thought
Camilla
Hodgson Jun 21, 2017, 10:39 AM
Assets held offshore in the British Virgin Islands
(BVI) are worth $1.5 trillion (£1.19 trillion), double the International
Monetary Fund's 2010 estimate. That's according to a new report by Capital
Economics, seen by the Financial Times.
The report notes that two-thirds of the companies
registered in the BVI are for "corporate structuring," a method often
used by companies for tax planning purposes, since the BVI is a tax haven. BVI
charges no capital gains tax and no corporation tax.
It
estimates that offshore structures involving the BVI allow companies to avoid
up to $750 million (£595 million) worth of tax.
Offshore
units also allow businesses to maintain high levels of secrecy since businesses
are not subject to the same transparency laws that apply in, for example, the
UK.
Criticism
of offshore structures has grown since the 2008 financial crisis: organisations
such as the Tax Justice Network have argued that the secretive nature of
offshore jurisdictions means they help enable financial crimes, such as money
laundering, in part because finding out who owns these companies is often very
difficult, if not impossible.
The report
found that a quarter of BVI companies were funds and investment units, rather
than operating businesses, and that 5% were holding companies for property and
family wealth. However, the report's author Mark Pragnell said BVI companies
were being used less for holding private wealth, and more by international
companies looking for maximum tax efficiency.
The BVI is
considered a convenient offshore country for British businesses, since, as a
British Overseas Territory, its legal system is based on the British system.
These companies, many of which are British owned, generate billions of dollars
in revenue every year.
"The
BVI has never been a secrecy jurisdiction. We adhere to privacy for
clients," Lorna Smith, interim executive director of BVI Finance, told the
Financial Times.

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário