Under its new Spanish presidency, the EU is pressing ahead with its attempt to agree a basis for taxing non-resident interest payments under its Savings Tax Directive, which necessarily involves the agreement of key foreign countries, notably the US, to collect and provide information about such payments. The IRS is more than happy to oblige, and has been seeking extended powers to force banks to disclose the identities and transaction details for their non-resident clients. The OECD is also continuing its initiative against tax competition and 'tax havens'.
Washington organisation the Centre for Freedom and Prosperity, which has been leading the fight against greater disclosure in the US, reports today that Senior House Ways and Means Committee Member, Representative Phil Crane, has written to Treasury Secretary Paul O'Neill asking him six key questions on tax competition and its effect on the US.
The full letter is given below, but in brief the six questions are as follows:
January 9, 2002
The Honorable Paul O'Neill
Secretary of the Treasury
Department of Treasury
1500 Pennsylvania Avenue
Washington, DC 20220
Dear Secretary O'Neill,
I am hoping that you and your staff can answer some questions about the "information exchange" initiatives that are being advocated by high-tax governments in Europe. More specifically, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) and the European Union (EU) want governments to collect private financial data and then share that information with foreign tax collectors.
As you can imagine, I find these initiatives very troubling. They are being pushed as part of an assault on tax competition, yet we are the world's biggest beneficiary of tax competition. They represent an egregious assault on financial privacy, and they also undermine the sovereign right of nations to set their own tax and privacy laws. With this in mind, I would like to know:
Thanks in part to our attractive tax and privacy laws, we have lured
almost $10 trillion of the world's capital to our economy. Has the Treasury
Department conducted any estimate of how much foreign investment would
be withdrawn from America if we became an informer for other governments'
tax authorities? If not, could you please provide one as soon as possible?
The OECD is threatening low-tax jurisdictions with financial protectionism
if they don't agree to change their tax and privacy laws so foreign governments
can collect more tax revenue. Has your department ascertained whether
such policies would violate international trade agreements? If not, could
you please provide an opinion on this matter as soon as possible?
There are many tax reform proposals, such as the flat tax and national
sales tax, that would repeal the double taxation of capital income in
ways that would eliminate any need for the government to track the private
financial assets of law-abiding individual taxpayers. There also are many
incremental reform proposals, like universal and unrestricted back-ended
IRAs, that would have the same result. Yet it seems that these proposals
would be incompatible with the OECD and EU initiatives, both of which
are based on the premise that capital income should be double taxed and
that governments should know each individual's financial assets. Can your
department assure me that the OECD and EU proposals would not hinder our
efforts to reform the tax system? More specifically, can your department
guarantee that we would not feel compelled to collect any data for foreign
tax collectors that we do not need to collect for U.S. tax purposes?
Many U.S. states have attractive tax and incorporation laws that draw
business from around the world. These laws, however, often include strong
privacy protections that presumably would not be allowed by the OECD and
EU proposals. This raises important questions about the integrity and
viability of our federal system that has served our nation so well. Has
your department estimated whether state governments would be compelled
to change their laws? If not, could you please provide a list of state
laws that would be affected?
Because of ethnic persecution, crime, and political instability, many
people use the United States as a safe haven for their wealth. Yet if
information exchange becomes a global norm, these people will be at risk.
Has the department assessed the human rights and personal safety implications
of the OECD and EU initiatives? Do you think that it is realistic to believe
that this information will be safe from corrupt bureaucrats, sophisticated
hackers, and oppressive governments?
Many of the low-tax jurisdictions that are being threatened by the OECD
are in our hemisphere. These countries and territories have developed
thriving financial services sectors that are a source of growth and jobs.
Yet this private sector development would be crippled – if not totally
destroyed – if information exchange becomes the norm. Has your department
estimated the economic impact this would have on our friends and allies
in the Caribbean? If not, could you provide an estimate of the increased
crime and illegal immigration that will result?
Tax competition should be celebrated rather than persecuted. It is a liberalizing
force in the world economy, and it certainly is a force that benefits
America. Creating a "global network of tax police" is a fundamental
assault on financial privacy and fiscal sovereignty. I hope you will oppose
these initiatives – much as you rejected the OECD's so-called "harmful
tax competition" scheme, and I look forward to a prompt answer to
my questions.
Sincerely,
Phil Crane
Member of Congress
.
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