Offshore
US Frowns On European Union Tax Jurisdiction Blacklist

The US is unhappy that the European Union's recently-published list of "non-co-operative" jurisdictions includes Guam and American Samoa.
Last month's publication by the European Union of a blacklist
of non-co-operating tax jurisdictions has drawn fire from the
US government, angry that Guam and American Samoa were placed on
the list.
Media reports said that Steven Mnuchin told EU Secretary General
Jeppe Tranholm-Mikkelsen “there is no basis for concluding that
American Samoa and Guam have any role in promoting the evasion or
avoidance of taxes imposed by European Union member states.”
The Treasury Secretary's comments were contained in a letter,
reports said.
This publication has sought confirmation of details from the
Treasury and the EU. The European Council - the organization
dealing with the matter - declined to comment to this
publication.
In early December, the EU published a list of 17 jurisdictions
that it said fell short of governance standards. The countries
are American Samoa; Bahrain; Barbados; Grenada; Guam; Republic of
Korea (aka South Korea); Macao SAR; Marshall Islands; Mongolia;
Namibia; Palau; Panama; Saint Lucia; Samoa; Trinidad and Tobago;
Tunisia; United Arab Emirates.
In his letter, Mnuchin reportedly said “the United States has
full confidence in American Samoa, Guam, and all of the US
territories; their tax administrations; and their compliance with
international norms with respect to taxation.”
The EU had criticized Guam for not applying “BEPS minimum
standards” and not signing or ratifying “the OECD Multilateral
Convention on Mutual Administrative Assistance” on tax matters.
(BEPS refers to "base erosion and profit shifting" - the practice
avoiding tax by shifting the reporting of profits to low-tax
countries.)
Cross-border angst
That the EU has slammed US-linked jurisdictions for allegedly
falling short on tax avoidance/evasion prevention is ironic,
given that the US has in recent years used its extra-territorial
muscle to go after Swiss banks and punish France's largest bank,
BNP Paribas, for
breaching sanctions against countries such as Sudan and Iran. (In
that case, the US fine on the bank of almost $9.0 billion
prompted anger in Paris.)
In fact, the US has led the way in some respects in punishing
banks for operating secret offshore accounts. About four years
ago, the Swiss and US governments signed an agreement under which
Swiss banks that thought there was a risk of compliance breaches
would sign non-prosecution agreements and pay settlements. More
than a 100 such institutions did so. Separately, banks such as
Julius Baer and UBS no longer offer offshore accounts to
Americans. The US also in 2010 enacted the FATCA legislation to
chase down expat US citizens that may be dodging taxes.
The long arm of US law even saw it initiate arrests, conducted by
authorities in Zurich, Switzerland, of officials at FIFA, the
global soccer organization, over suspicions of financial
wrongdoing. The US got involved because dollar-denominated
transactions were allegedly used.
Such actions have led some to argue that the US, which has
associated tax jurisdictions such as American Samoa and Guam,
operates double standards. For example, a Geneva-based
university professor has written in these pages that US
states such as Delaware, for example, enjoy levels of financial
privacy denied today to Switzerland.
A number of jurisdictions are now signed up to the Common Reporting
Standard, a set of agreements among countries - adopting
standards crafted by the OECD - through which information upon
request is exchanged to foil tax dodgers. The US is not a
signatory to the CRS.
CRS “early adopters” (source: OECD) are: Anguilla, Argentina,
Barbados, Belgium, Bermuda, British Virgin Islands, Bulgaria,
Cayman Islands, Columbia, Croatia, Curacao, Cyprus, Czech
Republic, Denmark, Dominica, Estonia, Faroe Islands, Finland,
France, Germany, Gibraltar, Greece, Greenland, Guernsey, Hungary,
Iceland, India, Ireland, Isle of Man, Italy, Jersey, South Korea,
Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Mauritius,
Mexico, Montserrat, Netherlands, Niue, Norway, Poland, Portugal,
Romania, San Marino, Seychelles, Slovak Republic, Slovenia, South
Africa, Spain, Sweden, Trinidad and Tobago, Turks and Caicos
Islands, the UK.
The jurisdictions undertaking exchanges by 2018 are: Albania,
Andorra, Antigua and Barbuda, Aruba, Australia, Austria, the
Bahamas, Belize, Brazil, Brunei Darussalam, Canada, Chile, China,
Cook Islands, Costa Rica, Ghana, Grenada, Hong Kong, Indonesia,
Israel, Japan, Kuwait, Marshall Islands, Macao, Malaysia, Monaco,
New Zealand, Panama, Qatar, Russia, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Samoa,
Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Saudi Arabia,
Singapore, Sint Maarten, Switzerland, Turkey, United Arab
Emirates, Uruguay.