Washington's Center for Freedom and Prosperity has issued a Strategic Memorandum on the subject of the EU's Savings Tax Directive. The Center's Chairman, Dan Mitchell, Heritage Foundation Senior Fellow, says that the Directive is similar to the OECD's 'harmful tax competition' initiative in seeking to protect uncompetitive nations from the discipline of market forces.
'As we have mentioned in earlier communications,' writes Dan Mitchell, 'the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development's so-called "harmful tax competition" initiative is most properly characterized as a "foot in the door" for the European Union's "savings tax directive." This EU scheme, which is based on automatic and unlimited "information exchange," would create a tax cartel and is a significant threat to market-based policy and fiscal competition. In particular, it is an effort to preserve bad tax policy. The two worst features of the plan are:
' Fortunately, there is every reason to believe that the EU's cartel can be defeated. In large part, this is because there is a great deal of dissension within Europe on the issue. Nations like Luxembourg and Austria (along with a few others) would be very happy to see the initiative collapse. Perhaps even more importantly, the savings tax cartel is contingent on the participation of the United States and five non-EU jurisdictions in Europe - including Switzerland and Liechtenstein. If any of them say no, the cartel falls apart.
'Because of the inherent tensions inside Europe on this issue, the proposal almost surely will fall apart if it runs into any major obstacle. Supporters of tax competition, financial privacy, and fiscal sovereignty can help hasten its demise in the following two ways:
'In conclusion, we hope that people understand that this battle can be won. One year ago, skeptics told us that it would be impossible to derail the OECD scheme. Yet we have made tremendous strides (only a tiny handful of minor jurisdictions have surrendered since the OECD published its reprehensible blacklist) and have completely hamstrung the Paris-based bureaucracy. The EU proposal is a bigger threat, but it also will be easier to defeat. All that we ask is that jurisdictions protect their own interests by saying no to both Paris and Brussels.'
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