Tax Haven - History

History

Taxation
An aspect of fiscal policy
Policies Government revenue
Tax revenue · Non-tax revenue
Tax law · Tax bracket · Tax threshold
Exemption · Credit · Deduction
Tax shift · Tax cut · Tax holiday
Tax advantage · Tax incentive
Tax reform · Tax harmonization
Tax competition · Double taxation
Representation · Unions
Medical savings account
Tax, tariff and trade
Economics Price effect · Excess burden
Tax incidence
Laffer curve · Optimal tax
Theory
Collection Revenue service · Revenue stamp
Tax assessment · Taxable income
Tax lien · Tax refund · Tax shield
Tax residence · Tax preparation
Tax investigation · Tax shelter
Private tax collection · Tax farming
Noncompliance Tax avoidance · Tax evasion
Tax resistance · Tax haven
Smuggling · Black market
Unreported employment · Tax shelter
Distribution Tax rate
Progressive · Regressive
Proportional
Types Direct · Indirect · Per unit · Ad valorem · In rem
Capital gains · Carbon · Consumption
Dividend · Ecotax · Excise · Georgist
Gift · Gross receipts · Income
Inheritance (estate) · Land value
Payroll · Pigovian · Property
Sales · Sin · Stamp · Turnover
Value-added (VAT)
Corporate profit · Excess profits
Windfall profits · Negative (income) · Flat
International Financial transaction tax
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Tobin tax · Spahn tax
Tax equalization · Tax treaty
European Union FTT
Trade Custom · Duty
Tariff (Import · Export) · Tariff war
Free trade · Free trade zone
Trade pact
By country List of countries by tax rates
Tax revenues as %GDP
Albania · Algeria · Argentina · Australia · Azerbaijan · Bangladesh · Bhutan · Canada · China · Colombia · France · Germany · Greece · Iceland · India · Indonesia · Iran · Ireland · Israel · Italy · Japan · Kazakhstan · Lithuania · Taxation in Namibia · Netherlands · New Zealand · Norway · Pakistan · Palestinian territories · Peru · Russia · Singapore · South Africa · Sweden · Switzerland · Tanzania · United Kingdom · United States

The use of differing tax laws between two or more countries to try to mitigate tax liability is probably as old as taxation itself. In Ancient Greece, some of the Greek Islands were used as depositories by the sea traders of the era to place their foreign goods to thus avoid the two-percent tax imposed by the city-state of Athens on imported goods. It is sometimes suggested that the practice first reached prominence through the avoidance of the Cinque ports and later the staple ports in the twelfth and fourteenth centuries respectively. In 1721, American colonies traded from Latin America to avoid British taxes.

Various countries claim to be the oldest tax haven in the world. For example, the Channel Islands claim their tax independence dating as far back as Norman Conquest, while the Isle of Man claims to trace its fiscal independence to even earlier times. Nonetheless, the modern concept of a tax haven is generally accepted to have emerged at an uncertain point in the immediate aftermath of World War I. Bermuda sometimes optimistically claims to have been the first tax haven based upon the creation of the first offshore companies legislation in 1935 by the newly created law firm of Conyers Dill & Pearman. However, the Bermudian claim is debatable when compared against the enactment of a Trust Law by Liechtenstein in 1926 to attract offshore capital.

Most economic commentators suggest that the first "true" tax haven was Switzerland, followed closely by Liechtenstein. Swiss banks had long been a capital haven for people fleeing social upheaval in Russia, Germany, South America and elsewhere. However, in the early part of the twentieth century, in the years immediately following World War I, many European governments raised taxes sharply to help pay for reconstruction efforts following the devastation of World War I. By and large, Switzerland, having remained neutral during the Great War, avoided these additional infrastructure costs and was consequently able to maintain a low level of taxes. As a result, there was a considerable influx of capital into the country for tax related reasons. It is difficult, nonetheless, to pinpoint a single event or precise date which clearly identifies the emergence of the modern tax haven.

Until the 1950s, tax havens were used to avoid personal taxation, but since then jurisdictions have come to focus on attracting companies with low or no corporate tax. Centres which focus on providing financial services to corporations rather than private wealth management are more often known as offshore financial centres.

This strategy generally relied on double taxation treaties between large jurisdictions and the tax haven, allowing corporations to structure group ownership through the smaller jurisdiction to reduce tax liability. However, some of these double-tax treaties survive, for example a double-taxation treaty still exists between Barbados and Japan, as well as another between Cyprus and Russia.

In the early to mid-1980s, most tax havens changed the focus of their legislation to create corporate vehicles which were "ring-fenced" and exempt from local taxation (although they usually could not trade locally either). These vehicles were usually called "exempt companies" or "international business corporations". However, in the late 1990s and early 2000s, the OECD began a series of initiatives aimed at tax havens to curb the abuse of what the OECD referred to as "unfair tax competition". Under pressure from the OECD, most major tax havens repealed their laws permitting these ring-fenced vehicles to be incorporated, but concurrently they amended their tax laws so that a company which did not actually trade within the jurisdiction would not accrue any local tax liability.

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