Offshore
Another Caribbean Offshore Centre Endorses Information-Sharing Standards

St Kitts and Nevis is the latest
Caribbean country to respond to international pressure to
conform to transparency in financial sector regulation or face a
crackdown, local media reports said.
Parliament in Basseterre has passed a new law for the exchange of
information on tax.
The Group of 20 developed and developing countries -
gathering for a meeting in London next week - has threatened to
slap sanctions on offshore centres that do not abide by
international transparency standards. These countries say tax
havens encourage taxpayers to flee, leaving less well-off
taxpayers having to pay higher bills. However, defenders of such
jurisdictions say they are being unfairly blamed for home-grown
economic problems in G20 nations.
The Organisation for Economic Co-oporation and Development has
set new standards for transparency and exchange of information on
tax matters.
In the past month three regional jurisdictions Bermuda, the
British Virgin Islands and the Cayman Islands have indicated
their willingness to comply. St Kitts Finance Minister Timothy
Harris told parliament yesterday that passage of the new law was
necessary to protect the country's financial sector, media
reports said.