Offshore
Claims Over European "Tax Havens" Swirl Amid Sanctions

A firm specialising in AML work has seized on the crackdowns against Russian oligarchs to say how much revenue is lost to those both using offshore accounts and who aren't full citizens – and taxpayers in certain nations. The firm's points have been criticised as wrong by those talking to this publication.
Claims that the UK is near the top of rankings for jurisdictions
leaking tax revenues to offshore centres have met with a mixture
of puzzlement and derision. Even so, whatever the figures say,
the use of countries by Russian oligarchs has cast a shadow over
cross-border financial flows more broadly.
The UK government announced a few weeks ago that it was freezing
assets of Russian oligarchs and those deemed to be linked to the
regime of Vladimir Putin following Russia’s invasion of
Ukraine.
The actions put the wealth management industry in the cross-hairs
of regulators. It is not easy to judge where to draw the line
when casting clients out (see this publication’s editorial on the
issue,
here.) And it also puts more focus on anti-money laundering
and know-your-client controls.
According to a press release sent to this publication last week,
“Research by AML experts, Credas
Technologies, has revealed that the level of UK GDP lost in
tax revenue to offshore wealth is one of the highest in Europe,
with just Luxembourg, Cyprus, Ireland and Malta ranking
higher.”
“The Ukraine conflict has drawn focus to the illicit activities
of some super-wealthy individuals and entities within the UK, but
it’s fair to say that this is certainly a two-way street and the
tax lost to offshore wealth of UK citizens alone is quite
staggering. That’s not to say that all offshore wealth is illegal
but the financial secrecy it provides is often the defining
feature that enables, and encourages, non-residents to hide their
assets and even their identity while laundering money and abusing
their tax responsibilities,” Tim Barnett, CEO of Credas
Technologies, said.
Barnett’s firm uses data from the World Bank and the Tax Justice
Network for its figures. (The TJN, for those who may not follow
the offshore world closely, is a campaigning organisation
claiming that offshore centres draw off revenues from governments
at the expense of the poor and those unable to easily avoid tax.
Avoidance is not illegal.)
For example, Credas Technologies said “it’s estimated that
offshore wealth owned by UK citizens totals a huge £845.5 billion
($1.11 trillion), by far the highest total compared with any
EU nation, with Ireland ranking second at £431.6 billion. This
also means that the UK ranks top when it comes to the estimated
tax revenue lost as a result of offshore wealth, totalling £19.2
billion.
Luxembourg is the worst offender for revenue losses, where total
offshore wealth is valued at £339.2 billion with the nation
losing £7.8 billion in tax revenue as a result. This lost tax
revenue is equivalent to 14.03 per cent of Luxembourg’s GDP,
Credas Technologies said.
Question marks
Tim Worstall, who
has written for WealthBriefing on tax matters,
said that a corporation has to get money to the
shareholders. If a corporation is in a haven it could avoid tax –
for a while. But if the holding corporation is in a more
“onshore” jurisdiction then the profits must go from the offshore
company to the holding company. They are then declared as
profits, taxed, and then can be paid out as a dividend. The UK’s
Controlled Foreign Companies rules deal with this sort of issue.
Back in 2017, when US President Donald Trump slashed US corporate
tax rates – then among the world’s highest – he also made Apple
and other big firms pay tax on offshore profits even if money
wasn’t repatriated.
Turning to individuals, Worstall said that it is again not enough that money is offshore.
"It's also necessary that it not be declared at home," Worstall said, pointing that a decade ago when the UK government inked a deal to regularise matters with Swiss banks to recover revenues, the amount recovered was "pitiful." "The vast majority of Swiss account holders either didn’t owe tax in the UK (they might have been expats) or had been declaring earnings and were paying tax," he said.
A figure in the Luxembourg wealth management industry, who asked
not to be named, was unimpressed by the figures Credas
Technologies used.
“I struggle to understand the methodology, rationale and
relevance of these figures’ sorting exercise, and also the
ranking where another way to read it is that Luxembourg managed
to establish itself as a major and credible financial centre over
the time, and I understand that all the followers are
jurisdictions that are obviously competing with Luxembourg and
very keen to catch up… I am afraid, this way of operating when
confronted to unbeatable factual elements such as those below, is
weighing heavily on this organisation’s credibility,” the person
said.
With the use today of automatic exchange of information
agreements, such as the Common Reporting Standard framework, this
system “ensures de facto that all individuals’ assets (including
those of UK’s citizens) are tax compliant,” the person said.
“Our experience with HNW individuals and especially ultra-UHNW
individuals is that their financial surface is so substantial
that they very often want to comply even more than necessary to
precisely avoid any naming or shaming,” the person said.
Double-tax treaties – signed by many countries – also need to be
taken into account when considering such figures, the person
said. “These are made to prevent the economic double taxation of
the same revenue, which means that once again, any upstream
distribution to one of those individuals has very often already
suffered corporate taxation,” the person added.
Credas Technologies said Cyprus ranks second in its revenue
leakage charts where the £845.2 million in lost tax revenue
equates to 4.55 per cent of national GDP, with Ireland (3.22 per
cent) and Malta (2.71 per cent) also ranking above the UK.
At the behest of US President Joe Biden in October 2021, the
Group of 20 group of major industrialised nations, agreed to set
a minimum corporate tax floor of 15 per cent – at odds with
Ireland, for example, where the rate was even lower. Defenders of
the move said it would prevent “harmful” tax competition;
opponents have likened such steps as trying to frame a global tax
“cartel.”