This article appeared
first in the Washington Times on December 8th and appears with
the permission of the author, Daniel J Mitchell, Chairman of the
Center for Freedom and Prosperity at http://www.freedomandprosperity.org/
The OECD's Glass
House
Second of two parts
By Daniel J. Mitchell
European politicians,
upset that investors and entrepreneurs are migrating to friendlier
economic climates, are using the Paris-based Organization for
Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) in an effort to force
low-tax nations to raise tax rates and eliminate financial privacy.
This effort has not been very successful, in large part because
low-tax nations are not foolish enough to discard a competitive
advantage just so foreign tax collectors will have an easier time
collecting revenue.
Yesterday's
column discussed how the OECD has continuously modified its
strategy. At first, the OECD complained that it was unfair for
low-tax countries (so-called tax havens) to lure economic activity
away from high-tax countries. Then OECD started threatening low-tax
countries with financial protectionism. Yet neither of these strategies
was successful, so the OECD now has resorted to bribery.
More specifically,
the OECD has invited the low-tax nations from our hemisphere to
a regional conference in Barbados early next year. They also have
invited representatives from international bureaucracies such
as the United Nations, the World Bank, and the International Monetary
Fund. The widespread assumption is that the OECD, with either
explicit or implicit support from these multinational institutions,
will offer a deal to lawmakers from low-tax countries: Foreign
aid money in exchange for letting the OECD dictate tax and privacy
laws.
To give the OECD
credit, at least it is honest. In its recent publication, "Towards
Global Tax Cooperation," the OECD clearly stated it would
steer foreign aid to low-tax regimes that "cooperate."
Indeed, one OECD official was honest enough to say, "It would
make sense for the bigger countries to buy them off."
Yet if the OECD deserves
credit for being honest, they also should be condemned for hypocrisy.
The OECD has a major project, the entire purpose of which is to
reduce bribery of government officials. This is a noble goal,
but it should be evenly applied. Therefore, if it is bad for a
private company to bribe a government official to get a contract,
then it also should be bad for high-tax nations to bribe government
officials from low-tax nations in exchange for helping politicians
from high-tax nations collect more tax revenue.
Upon closer examination,
it turns out that hypocrisy is a way of life at the OECD. Ignoring
its own pronouncements about bribery is only Hypocrisy No. 1.
As the following list illustrates, the OECD clearly does not mind
throwing stones in a glass house.
Hypocrisy No. 2:
The OECD complains that low-tax nations distort economic activity,
yet they provide tax-free salaries to their own employees - making
the OECD a tax haven for bureaucrats.
Hypocrisy No. 3:
The OECD has stated that cartels are bad because "competitors
collude rather than compete for customers' business." But
what is their anti-tax competition effort other than an effort
to create a cartel of high-tax nations, sort of an OPEC for politicians?
Hypocrisy No. 4:
The OECD argues that low-tax countries must eliminate financial
privacy so there will be transparency (i.e., so politicians can
spy on people), yet an audit of the OECD discovered that its records
were so poorly kept that reaching "an informed opinion as
to the organization's financial health, including its liquidity
and solvency, is difficult."
Hypocrisy No. 5:
The OECD has stated that, "Liberalization open markets is
at the core of the Organization's work and is aimed at facilitating
cross-border flows of trade and investment." Yet this rhetoric
rings hollow, given the organization's current support for financial
protectionism against low-tax competitors.
Hypocrisy No. 6:
The OECD claims it used neutral criteria to define so-called tax
havens, but conveniently failed to include Switzerland, Luxembourg,
Hong Kong, Ireland, Singapore and Great Britain. They even ignored
the biggest tax haven of all - the United States. (Though, to
be fair, the OECD surely will try to dictate tax policy in these
regimes if they succeed in bullying the less powerful nations
on their blacklist.)
Hypocrisy No. 7:
The OECD argues that "tax havens" must abide by internationally
accepted standards, but then proposes to dramatically change international
norms regarding taxation, sovereignty, and law. Moreover, none
of the OECD's work has been subject to peer review. The OECD even
refused to allow its own business advisory group to participate
in the project.
Finally, it is worth
noting that the OECD is using their anti-tax competition work
to justify a request for a bigger budget. This may not qualify
as hypocrisy, but it certainly adds insult to injury. The OECD's
bureaucrats get tax-free salaries, but they want to make it easier
for politicians to impose higher taxes on everyone else. They
get to jet around the world in business class. They even have
their own wine cellar.
Bigger budget? How
about a dose of the real world instead.
Daniel J. Mitchell
is the McKenna senior fellow in political economy at the Heritage
Foundation.