Category Archives: European Tax & Money Havens

American companies are living the United States because of high taxes

The corporate tax rate in the United States is the second highest in the developed world.

American companies are finding new overseas tax havens to legally protect some of their profits from the U.S. tax rate of 35 percent, among the highest in the world. Lesley Stahl reports. Move your corporation or part of your corporation out of the United States while it still is possible. Do not wait as the current negative sentiment could result in restriction on US companies in the future.

See the video covering the story at: http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=7376848n&tag=nl.e882#ixzz1VmZRlPaG

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Liechtenstein to weaken asset and tax protection

Liechtenstein’s government has recently submitted a proposal for consultation, which aims to extend legal assistance in criminal tax matters by implementing changes to the Principality’s existing legal assistance law and by agreeing to the additional protocol to the European legal aid agreement.

Under current law, providing legal assistance in criminal tax matters is strictly prohibited. Liechtenstein’s government maintains in its release, however, that although there are three exceptions to this, the provisions are currently very limited both as regards their content and as regards the circle of countries with which such requests are accepted.

The government explains that with its declaration of March 12, 2009, Liechtenstein agreed with the states concerned to implement international standards pertaining to an exchange of information in tax matters. It notes that in the tax information and double taxation agreements that have so far been concluded, the Principality has pledged to provide comprehensive mutual assistance, including searches and seizures, some of which fall outside of its own criminal tax proceedings.

Consequently, the government argues that such restrictive legislation in the area of legal assistance in criminal tax matters is inconsistent with its newly adopted strategy and therefore carries a very real risk to the country’s reputation, which, it emphasizes, should not be underestimated.

Liechtenstein’s government has therefore proposed that the scope for providing legal assistance in criminal tax matters be widened. It has also underlined the need to agree to the additional protocol to the European agreement on legal assistance in criminal matters, and suggested that the general fiscal reservation provided for under article 51 of the country’s legal assistance law (RHG) should be removed and replaced by the introduction of a new article 51 paragraph 1 providing that limited legal assistance should also be permitted in the case of tax evasion.

The consultation period is due to last until July 29.

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Prague Russians new Zurich

Today’s Czech Republic, firmly anchored in the NATO and European Union, the richest former Communist country in central Europe, and boasting low inflation and a stable currency. Mix in the country’s natural beauty, the Russian-Czech language proximity and the fact that it takes under three hours to fly from Moscow to Prague. It then becomes little surprising that the Czech Republic has attracted large numbers of Russian expatriates according to Wall Street Journal.

Prague Photos
This photo of Prague is courtesy of TripAdvisor

According to official statistics nearly 32,000 Russians with either temporary or long-term     residency permits live in the Czech Republic. This isn’t a lot in a country of 10 million but the official number is swelled by thousands more who commute between Moscow and Prague while taking with them some of their hard-earned money away from what they see as unstable Russia into the safety of Czech-based banks.

“Ordinary Russians move in the Czech Republic because they view the country as safe and because they want their children to live in a stable society,” Alexej Kelin of the Prague-based Russian Tradition expatriate organization was quoted as saying last night by the CT-24 Czech television news channel.

Russians are mostly concentrated in Prague and the western Czech spa town of Karlovy Vary. Most are professionals with incomes above the Czech average of about $1,500 a month. The wealthiest Russians in the Czech Republic have made several local banks offer private banking services by Russian-speaking staff.

One of them is Raiffeisen Bank International, an Austrian retail lender. It has recently begun offering its top private banking services under the Friedrich Wilhelm Raiffeisen moniker, or FWR, in Prague and Brno, the second-largest Czech city, some two hours by car south-east of the capital. FWR has branches in only a few other places, including Vienna and Budapest.

FWR opens accounts for clients with at least EUR 500,000 in assets. The bank doesn’t disclose details on its clients but people familiar with its services say that well-to-do Russians account for a large customer segment of its Prague branch. These Russians picked the Czech capital as one of several places outside Russia from where they can manage their wealth, having already stashed some money away in Switzerland, the U.K. and offshore tax-havens.

“Among the former Soviet-bloc countries, Prague is something like Zürich for well-off Russians,” says one person familiar with the Czech banking sector catering for Russian clients. See the full article in Wall Street Journal.

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United Kingdom to clamp down on tax exiles

Tax exiles who emigrate overseas and wealthy people who live here but avoid British taxes by registering as ‘non-doms’ are likely to be targeted by new rules the Treasury begins consulting on today according to The Telegraph.

Wealthy foreigners who have lived in Britain for 12 or more years are already due to be charged £ 50,000 a year from next April, if they wish to retain ‘non-domiciled’ status. This enables them to avoid paying tax here on their worldwide income and gains – an option few other countries offer foreign residents.

But recent litigation has revealed confusion about when Britons who have moved overseas can legally avoid UK income, capital gains and inheritance taxes. Now leading accountants say the Treasury must modernise fiscal statutes and ensure everyone pays their fair share.

John Whiting, a director of the Chartered Institute of Taxation, said: “The rules on tax residence are jumbled and uncertain and are far from what we need for a modern tax system. The aim must be for a statutory test to give businesses and individuals certainty in this increasingly mobile world.

“A statutory test needs to make sure there is proper recognition of those who go abroad to work, who need to be outside the UK net, and clear rules that tell those who come to the UK when they will be in the UK tax net.”

Richard Mannion, a director at Smith & Williamson, pointed out: “Much of the law regarding an individual’s tax residence status in UK is based on case law that was laid down nearly 100 years ago at a time when Indian civil servants retired to live in hotels in Europe and sea captains embarked on circumnavigations that took a whole year.

“There was no concept than of airline pilots or businessmen with interests in different countries throughout the world who flew in and out of the country on a regular basis. There were few new tax cases on residence until recently, when there have been several which have captured the headlines including Mr Robert Gaines-Cooper, a jet setting businessman, and Mr Lyle Grace, an airline pilot.

“These cases have shown how ill-equipped the old case law is in terms of dealing with the modern world and they have demonstrated the need for a more modern test.”

For example, married couples should be freed from antiquated rules, said George Bull of Baker Tilly: “The Government should abolish the £55,000 IHT inter-spouse exemption limit for mixed domicile couples which is petty, unnecessary and potentially illegal under European Union law.
“It should also remove the rule which treats women married before 1974 as having their husband’s domicile. In 2011, women are not chattels.”

David Kilshaw, chair of private client advisory at KPMG in the UK, added that residency rules differ for different taxes: “For income tax, you can be non-resident in the UK if you are working abroad under a full time contract of employment for a complete tax year. You can also be non- resident if you leave the UK ‘permanently or indefinitely’.

“Capital gains tax is more difficult as this requires at least five complete tax years out of the UK. If an individual returns to the UK within the five tax years following departure some capital gains made in this period become chargeable to tax in the year of return to the UK.

“But domicile – not residence – is the determining factor when considering inheritance tax. Domicile is governed by general law and there are special provisions that deem an individual to be domiciled in the UK for inheritance tax purposes where they have been resident in the UK for at least 17 out of the last 20 tax years.” See the full story in The Telegraph.

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Ukraine – Trade at a crossroad

As Russia attempts to lure the Ukraine into joining a proposed four-country economic bloc with promises of cut-price oil, Ukrainian authorities must decide whether to forgo an EU-Ukraine trade pact, being negotiated currently, or look to Russia, Kazakhstan and Belarus, for future economic and trade cooperation.

Speaking to parliament on April 7, Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych indicated that the nation would throw its lot in with the EU because the Ukraine would be unable to do both.

Under the terms of the Ukraine-EU free trade agreement, disclosed by the European Union in February 2010, the EU said that Ukraine is free to conclude other free trade agreements, but warned that it “would be difficult to negotiate a free trade area with the EU if [the Ukraine] was to join a customs union with other countries with which the EU’s trade is not liberalized and which apply a common customs tariff to their imports from countries outside that customs union,” as the case would be in the four-party bloc.

Yanukovych said Ukraine would welcome ‘a 3+1 agreement, which would provide preferential tariffs with the three nations, but would preserve greater national and economic sovereignty and crucially would enable the nation to continue the ongoing trade liberalization agenda with Europe.

In an almost immediate response to the President’s comments, Gazprom, Russia’s gas exporter, said that membership of the customs union would enable the Ukraine, which is largely dependent on Russian gas, to benefit from Russian domestic gas prices, rather than the European price (for Russian gas) it currently pays. Gazprom surmised that such an agreement could benefit Ukraine to the tune of USD 8 bn annually in cut-price gas.

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin is expected to take up this issue during his visit to the Ukraine on 12th April 2011.

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