The US Center for
Freedom and Prosperity (CFP) announced last week that it would
be attending the OECD's multilateral discussions with Caribbean
countries which had been 'blacklisted' for 'harmful tax practices',
to be held in Barbados on January 8th and 9th.
The OECD had previously
announced that the meetings would be attended by delegations from
the UN, the IMF and the World Bank, giving rise to speculation
that an attempt was going to be made to 'buy off' the jurisdictions
with aid and soft loan programmes in return for commitments to
information exchange and increases in taxation which would lessen
their attractions to tax exiles from high-taxing OECD member states.
The CFP is strongly against such 'fiscal colonialism' and has
been encouraging the jurisdictions to co-operate with each other
in order to have more power to resist the blandishments and threats
of the multilaterals.
Here is the text
of the press release issued by the CFP.
22nd December 2000
WASHINGTON, DC The Center for Freedom and Prosperity (CFP)
announced today that it will hold a series of discussions with
countries targeted by the Organization for Economic Co-operation
and Development (OECD) during the Commonwealth Secretariat/OECD's
upcoming multi-lateral consultations.
CFP President Andrew
Quinlan and Board Chairman Daniel Mitchell will be in Barbados
during the conference, January 8 9. On January 6, they
propose to meet with representatives from affected countries,
as well as OECD and other countries, to discuss the status of
the "harmful tax competition" debate, including developments
from the upcoming Bush Administration and leaders on Capitol Hill.
They also plan to discuss with low-tax regimes how to defend their
fiscal sovereignty.
The discussions are
being held in response to inquiries received by CFP's Coalition
for Tax Competition from several targeted countries and territories.
Both Mitchell and Quinlan met with leaders of affected Caribbean
countries at the annual Caribbean/Latin American Action Conference
earlier this month in Miami.
The strategy recommended
by CFP is two-fold, Quinlan said. The CFP advises affected governments
not to sign any agreements with the OECD -- a Paris-based international
organization with 30 member nations from the industrialized world
-- pending a sign from the Bush Administration's Treasury Department
on how it might handle the OECD's actions against low-tax nations.
"If the United
States does not support economic sanctions against 'blacklisted'
countries, it would be economically foolish for other industrialized
countries to follow through with their threats," Quinlan
said.
Even if the Bush
Administration does not take a strong public stand against the
OECD, Quinlan said several Members of Congress have stated their
opposition to the OECD initiative.
In a September letter
to outgoing Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers, Majority Leader
Dick Armey said, "Adopting the OECD's policy not only represents
a major change in tax policy, it hinders our efforts to reduce
the U.S. tax burden and reform our unfair tax code. It also poses
a serious risk to our continuing prosperity and prosperity around
the globe. I urge you to summarily and immediately reject this
policy."
The Center for Freedom
and Prosperity is a nonprofit independent organization created
to promote market liberalization. The Center for Freedom and Prosperity
was founded by its President Andrew Quinlan, a former senior aide
to Congress' Joint Economic Committee, and its Board Chairman
Daniel Mitchell, senior fellow at The Heritage Foundation.