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The Straits Times
The Straits Times
World

EU vows tax action after 'Paradise Papers'

The office of Appleby Group Services, a Bermuda-based law firm, in St Helier, Jersey. The new leak of confidential information, dubbed "Paradise Papers", came mostly from Appleby and has shone another light on the use of offshore accounts for tax avoidance and evasion.PHOTO: NYTIMES

BRUSSELS • The days in paradise may be numbered for those seeking refuge from heavy tax burdens in remote islands.

Finance ministers representing the world's largest market have vowed to take action following the leak of records exposing prominent members of the global business A-list.

"We will examine the new documents and will discuss the consequences this has for upcoming EU legislation," acting German Finance Minister Peter Altmaier said on Monday ahead of a meeting with his euro-area counterparts.

"We will take a very close look at this," he said, referring to the so-called "Paradise Papers" reports by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists and partner news outlets.

The new set of data, taken from an offshore law firm again, exposes the hidden wealth of individuals and shows how corporations, hedge funds and investors may have skirted taxes.

A year after the Panama Papers, this new massive leak of confidential information, mostly from the Bermuda law firm Appleby Group Services, has shone another light on the use of offshore accounts.

The Paradise Papers put "renewed emphasis on the work which the European Commission is doing to fight tax avoidance", Mr Valdis Dombrovskis, vice-president of the bloc's executive arm, told reporters in Brussels.

The bloc's anti-trust chief, Ms Margrethe Vestager, agreed, saying in a tweet that the leaks enable "the work against tax avoidance, for transparency".

The European Union has been working on finalising a so-called blacklist of uncooperative tax jurisdictions by the end of the year. This list of tax havens were due to be discussed at a meeting of EU finance ministers yesterday. While the discussion was originally planned for a December meeting, the matter was put on the agenda following the Paradise Papers revelations.

"A blacklist is always a difficult exercise," Luxembourg's Finance Minister Pierre Gramegna said on his way into the meeting yesterday. "It is an EU initiative that we have to agree together and we stand behind this idea."

A common EU list will set out all the jurisdictions the bloc's countries essentially deem to be tax havens. The bloc hopes the list will work primarily through a reputational incentive, forcing countries to become cooperative in order to avoid being "named and shamed".

However, if the countries remain persistently uncooperative, the EU hopes to have some credible sanctions too.

The bloc has stepped up its efforts in recent years to tackle tax avoidance and evasion by multinational companies and wealthy individuals.

While politically contentious, the blacklist has received fresh impetus following successive revelations which shed light on such practices and drew public outrage.

Austrian Finance Minister Hans Joerg Schelling said: "If one tax oasis closes, another one opens. We should toughen measures."

He added that those who do not participate in rules set by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, "be it on information exchange or other measures", should automatically be put on a blacklist so that everyone becomes willing to close these tax loopholes.

BLOOMBERG

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