Offshore
GUEST ARTICLE: Where Does The Panama Papers Saga Leave Offshore World?

The fallout from the Panama Papers scandal of last year continues, and this article examines the UK response in particular.
One of the most dramatic “leaks” of offshore data in recent
years came from Panama, and the “Panama Papers” saga has sent
shockwaves around the world, leading, among other developments,
to political resignations and discussion about the correct
balance between legitimate client privacy and questionable
secrecy. (To see a previous analysis of the issue,
click here.) In this article, Marie-Louise Murray, associate
of law firm Russell-Cooke, examines
some of the issues that flow from the Panama episode, including
the UK response to the matter. The editors of this news service
are pleased to share these views; they do not necessarily endorse
all comments from guest contributors and invite responses.
Readers can email the editor at tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com.
In November 2016, offshore law firm Mossack Fonseca was fined
$440,000 by the British Virgin Islands’ Financial Services
Commission, the highest penalty the FSC has ever issued. The
firm, central to the unprecedented April 2016 Panama Papers data
leak, was fined after a six-month site inspection revealed
several contraventions of the Anti-Money Laundering and Terrorist
Financing Code of Practice and the BVI Regulatory Code. It had
been fined $31,500 for anti-money laundering and information
security breaches earlier in 2016.
Some believed this would deepen cracks created by the Panama
Papers scandal in the already-fragile reputation of tax
havens.
But is this penalty, described by campaigners as “embarrassingly
inadequate”, simply a token gesture in response to recent media
scrutiny, made by a cynical regulator biding its time until
attention shifts to another scandal?
Why all the fuss?
Offshore asset-holding structures are not illegal. They can offer
reduced tax liability in often politically and economically
stable countries, with privacy (sometimes strict confidentiality)
for sensitive transactions. However, the Panama Papers shed light
on seemingly legitimate offshore structures disguising criminal
activity - including illegally circumventing tax (tax evasion not
avoidance), money laundering and terrorism.
Amid these revelations and a growing public focus on the
perceived immorality of many permitted tax avoidance activities,
regulators across the world have been forced to investigate.
As of December 2016 there had been inquiries in 79 countries and
around 6,500 taxpayers and companies across the world were under
investigation, as a result of the Panama Papers. Europol found
3,469 probable matches between their files and the Panama Papers,
with 116 on an Islamic terrorism project. The European Parliament
opened a 10-month inquiry into implementation failures of
anti-tax avoidance and financial transparency rules. Germany
introduced a “Panama Law”, requiring citizens to declare shell
companies.
German MEP Michael Theurer raised concerns about “the influence
of Great Britain on the former colonies and Crown dependencies
and the role that [they] are playing”. Although Mossack Fonseca
is Panama-based, over half the 214,000 structures uncovered in
the leak are headquartered in UK overseas territory the British
Virgin Islands.
Anti-corruption expert Mark Pieth described the UK as a “big part
of the problem” by not forcing its offshore centres to be more
transparent.
The UK response
The UK government started targeting offshore structures before
the leak. Facilities made available by HMRC until 2015 enabled
voluntary disclosure of outstanding tax liabilities on offshore
assets. HMRC calculates a £2 billion-plus recovery from offshore
tax evaders since 2010 and expects a further £7.2 billion by
2021. This is thanks to new powers and investment, including the
Common Reporting Standards (CRS), a UK-government led
“transformation in global financial transparency which...will see
HMRC automatically receive offshore account and trust data from
more than 90 countries, including British Overseas Territories
and Crown dependencies”.
The Finance Act 2016 includes new civil sanctions for offshore
evasion enablers and increased civil sanctions for offshore
evaders (building on new penalties in the Finance Act 2015 that
take part of the evaded asset as the penalty). There are three
new strict liability criminal offences for offshore evaders. HMRC
ends permanent non-dom status from April 2017 and introduced
measures to levy inheritance tax on all UK residential property,
regardless of holding structure.
Since June 2016, UK companies and LLPs must maintain and include
in Companies House returns lists of ultimate beneficial owners.
In June 2013 moves were announced to introduce public registers
of offshore companies’ beneficial ownership.
The day after the Panama Papers publication HMRC said: “There are
no safe havens for tax evaders... the days of hiding money
offshore are gone.” Following that, few tangible results
have actually been achieved by the UK government.
A UK government Panama Papers taskforce did initiate over 30 tax
fraud and financial crime investigations, and examinations into
the links of 43 “high net worth individuals” with
Panama. Over 60 financial services firms and banks have been
asked by the Financial Conduct Authority to disclose details of
any accounts handled by Mossack Fonseca and explain internal
procedures to assess exposure. But prominent tax lawyers question
HMRC’s capabilities and resources to manage investigations and
prosecutions of that scale.
The UK resisted EU Commission plans to blacklist zero-rate
corporation tax havens (including several Crown dependencies and
UK overseas territories) as “non-cooperative jurisdictions”, and
argued for a later deadline for compliance with EU transparency
rules. Anti-tax avoidance campaigners blame UK lobbying for the
dropping of transparency amendments to the EU Anti-Money
Laundering Directive.
UK attempts to persuade overseas territories to introduce
beneficial ownership company registers have stalled. They have
agreed to on-demand information-sharing with law enforcement
agencies. Although some tax havens have committed to CRS
information exchange protocols, each signatory country can choose
which accounts it considers “reportable”. Sceptics question the
ability and willingness of these jurisdictions to properly police
international information exchange rules.
What next for offshore?
While transparency standards are not universally applied and
policed, places exist for criminals to hide ill-gotten gains.
Equally, while such devices remain legal, high net worth
individuals and corporations will use offshore structures to
avoid domestic tax and transparency rules.
Critics remark that the UK government is already backsliding on
promises to “sweep away” offshore tax evasion. Previous leaks
(e.g. the Cayman Islands 2013 tax leak and the 2015 great HSBC
leak) have not ended offshore schemes. The highest ever fine
issued by the BVI financial regulator is a mere $440,000.
Offshore investments have existed for nearly a century - they
will not disappear overnight.
However, the Panama Papers have resulted in prosecutions and
contributed to an increasing focus on the morality versus
legality of offshore structures. The first CRS information
exchanges begin in 2017, signalling increased regulatory
investigations, inspections and audits. Investors should consult
professional advisors regarding legal and regulatory
obligations.
Lines between tax avoidance and tax evasion can be blurred.
Investors should brace themselves for increased scrutiny and a
greater expectation of transparency (including pre-emptive
disclosure), not to mention the reputational hazard of unwanted
association with those using offshore structures for criminal
activity.