From small
beginnings early in the 20th century,
the offshore sector has grown ever faster
in response to high tax rates in the developed
countries, until it is estimated now that
more than half of the world's money is offshore.
'Offshore' has no
precise dictionary meaning: the word
simply reflects the fact that most low tax
jurisdictions are islands. Loosely, it is
used to mean 'outside the control of the
highly-taxed Western nations', although
those nations could have controlled the
growth of offshore jurisdictions (International
Offshore Financial Centres = IOFCs) much
more tightly if they had wanted to. It is
an interesting question, why they didn't
maybe a combination of individual
self-interest and muddle?
Probably
by now the large, rich nations no longer
have the financial clout to take on 'offshore'
in any comprehensive way. The OECD fulminates
about 'harmful tax competition', and the
EU complains about 'unfair tax practices',
but in the real world of offshore there
are only minor changes to low-tax regimes.
This is partly because the rich countries
have their own tax breaks and incentives
for particular local purposes, and partly
because the rich countries themselves (both
the countries and their citizens) make plentiful
use of 'offshore'.
In 1999 and
2000, global concerns about money-laundering
have given the rich countries an opportunity
to mount a more concerted attack on 'offshore'.
This is certainly leading to better regulatory
structures in many of the IOFCs, but they
are fiercely resisting the underlying agenda
of 'tax harmonisation': any tax haven that
was weak enough to give in to rich-country
pressure in any meaningful way would quickly
be picked clean by its competitors. There
are 70 self-declared IOFCs already, and
another 100 countries that would be only
too happy to join them if the business was
there.
The one thing
that the rich countries can do, and
increasingly try to do, is to limit the
behaviour of their own citizens offshore.
As ever, their prohibitions have far more
effect on poor people than rich ones. Well-advised,
wealthy individuals and corporations generally
manage to avoid anti-avoidance measures.
The Internet
brings a new dimension to taxation,
because for the first time it is possible
for a supplier to offer and deliver some
sorts of product (e.g. music) to citizens
in ways which completely bypass the traditional
tax-measuring and tax-collecting arms of
government. It remains to be seen whether
the tax leakage this implies will spur governments
on to a more effective attack on the Internet
and 'offshore'. It must be doubted whether
an attack would succeed, and it's more likely
that a global approach to e-commerce taxation
will evolve in time. This is not a problem
that can be solved by individual countries,
or even by groups of countries.
IOFCs themselves
are a very mixed bag, and serve a variety
of different purposes for various types
of individual and corporation. Not all of
those purposes are legitimate: there is
no question that drug barons and other illegal
'businessmen' have used and do use IOFCs
to wash their money before recycling it
legally. The world's Governments and over-arching
economic organizations such as the OECD
have had some success in preventing abuses,
but laundering remains a problem in some
IOFCs. Among the main legal uses of IOFCs
are:
- tax-efficient
structuring of international trade
- holding
and investment companies
- offshore
investment funds
- protection
of personal wealth using trusts
- international
financial services
- 'captive'
insurance companies
- shipping
registries
Many IOFCs
are most useful in relation to a particular
high-tax country, eg the Isle of Man
which is offshore the UK. Others have specialized
in particular business sectors. The Jurisdictions
section of the lowtax.net site describes
the characteristics and uses of many of
all the main IOFCs in depth, and in the
Uses of Offshore
later in this section you will find a sector-by-sector
analysis of how offshore can be used, with
links to the jurisdictions that specialize
in each sector.
The word
'offshore' has a certain mystique to
those who have never been part of it. Wrongly,
they often suppose that participating in
'offshore' is not only a bit naughty, but
must necessarily be expensive. It can be
both, but doesn't have to be. Many IOFCs
use both English legal systems and the English
language; and there are many reputable advisers
to help a beginner through the early stages
of using 'offshore'. It is one of the purposes
of lowtax.net to make 'offshore' more accessible
and understandable, and to provide a ready
means of contacting offshore professionals
and suppliers.