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Minister slams report which ranks Jersey in top ten tax havens

Minister slams report which ranks Jersey in top ten tax havens

Wednesday 09 October 2024

Minister slams report which ranks Jersey in top ten tax havens

Wednesday 09 October 2024


The Assistant Treasury Minister has slammed a study which concluded that Jersey was the eighth most significant corporate tax haven in the world.

Deputy Ian Gorst – who also has political responsibility for financial services – said the methodology used by the Tax Justice Network was “flawed” and therefore the report “lacked credibility”.

The campaign group, which "believes our tax and financial systems are our most powerful tools for creating a just society", creates an annual Corporate Tax Haven Index by ranking jurisdictions against a number of criteria.

Top ten again

This year's ranking saw three British Overseas Territories – the British Virgin Islands, Cayman Islands and Bermuda – retain the top three positions.

Jersey was ranked eighth again, keeping its position among the top ten.

Explaining their method, the pressure group wrote: "The Corporate Tax Haven Index ranks countries on how complicit they are in helping multinational corporations underpay corporate income tax in other countries.

"It does this by evaluating how much wiggle room for corporate tax abuse a country's laws and regulations provide, and by monitoring how much financial activity conducted by multinational corporations enters and exits the country."

Findings "lack credibility"

Founding members of the Tax Justice Network have, however, left the organisation and criticised its methodology.

Deputy Gorst has also criticised it, while defending the Island's reputation in his response to the findings.

In a statement provided following questions from Express, the Minister said: "The findings of this report lack credibility due to the flawed methodology applied in its creation.

"Jersey is fully compliant with all global minimum standards regarding tax transparency set and assessed by the OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development), an independent global body."

Ian_Gorst_in_office.JPG

Pictured: Deputy Gorst was firm that the Island complies with the necessary regulations.

He added that Jersey's corporate tax system has been found not to be harmful by the European Union's Code of Conduct Group on Harmful Business Taxation, most recently in February 2024.

"Jersey's implementation of the OECD's Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) minimum standards is also annually peer reviewed and found to be in line with the standard," he said.

It also comes after Jersey received a positive report following a rigorous review by MONEYVAL assessors who rated the island's anti-financial crime measures to be in good health.

Global minimum tax plan progressing 

Deputy Gorst added that the Government is also currently "working on implementing new legislation to give effect to the OECD's Pillar Two regime, creating a minimum global tax rate of 15% for large multi-national groups of companies with effect from 2025".

Pillar Two is part of a global crackdown on companies moving their profits around several jurisdictions in order to minimise their taxes. The rules have been in force in the UK and the European Union since January this year.

Due to be debated in Jersey this month, the proposed tax hike would affect more than 1,000 multinational companies based in Jersey and it's been estimated that it could raise an extra £52 million a year for the Government's coffers. Some of that money is expected to be diverted towards funding the new hospital facility at Overdale.

But critics warned that there was a chance companies faced with 15% taxes might decide to move their headquarters away from Jersey.

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