Poll: Vast majority of British public want David Cameron to act on tax havens

7th April 2016 / United Kingdom

A ComRes poll commissioned by Christian Aid and Global Witness and carried out immediately before the Panama Papers exposé broke found overwhelming support among Brits for UK government action on the UK’s tax havens – its ‘Overseas Territories’. Major findings include:

Over three-quarters (77%) of British adults agree with the statement that “David Cameron has a moral responsibility to ensure that the UK’s Overseas Territories are as transparent as possible”. Agreement is even stronger among Conservative supporters (80%) and older Britons (85% for those aged 45+)

81% of British adults agree with the statement that “All companies, whether they are registered in the UK or its Overseas Territories, should be legally required to reveal their ultimate owners”. Agreement is even stronger among Conservative supporters (87%) and older Britons (89% for those aged 45+).
69% of British adults agree with the statement that “It is damaging to the UK’s international reputation to be linked to so-called ‘tax havens’”. Agreement is even stronger among older Britons (74% for those aged 45+).

Toby Quantrill, tax justice expert at Christian Aid said: “The findings are clear. If David Cameron were to require the UK’s tax havens to publicly reveal companies’ real owners, as the UK will shortly do, then British voters including Conservative voters would support him.”

Robert Palmer, anti-money laundering expert at Global Witness said: “David Cameron is hosting an anti-corruption summit in London next month. He should use it to require the UK tax havens to open up. He has the powers to do this, and this poll shows how much support there’d be for him showing such leadership.”

Much of the wrongdoing exposed by the Panama Papers relies on the anonymity provided by incorporating a company in a secrecy jurisdiction. Anonymously-owned companies are the main method used by tax evaders and the corrupt to hide their identity and therefore hide their money. This theft of public money harms people all over the world, as it robs countries of funds they should be spending on their citizens, whether funding health services, education or building roads. The effects are at best damaging, at worst catastrophic; in the UK contributing to the need for austerity measures and cuts to public funding, in many of the world’s poorest countries leading to death, conflict and extremism.

A 2011 World Bank study found that, for the corrupt, the UK’s Overseas Territories are the most popular places in which to incorporate. The British Virgin Islands are particularly infamous for the level of secrecy they provide and indeed half of the companies in the Panama Papers were incorporated in the British Virgin Islands.

David Cameron has himself stated that the UK’s overseas territories should do more to become transparent, while anti-corruption champion Sir Eric Pickles has said that the government could legislate to make this happen. The UK has used its powers over the Overseas Territories a number of times in the past, – for example by requiring the Caribbean Territories to abolish the death penalty and decriminalise homosexuality”. [2]

The UK has the power to make its tax havens far less attractive to criminals, by requiring the Overseas Territories to create public registers of the real owners of companies. The move would stop people being able to hide illicit activities behind shell companies. This would bring them into line with mainland UK, where the Prime Minister has already committed to creating such registers.

In May this year, the UK is hosting an international anti-corruption summit. These results show that without decisive action to act on the tax havens at the forthcoming summit, its efforts to stamp out global corruption cannot be seen as credible, nor can the summit be seen as a success by the public.

SafeSubcribe/Instant Unsubscribe - One Email, Every Sunday Morning - So You Miss Nothing - That's It


David Cameron has himself stated that the UK’s overseas territories should do more to become transparent, while anti-corruption champion Sir Eric Pickles has said that the government could legislate to make this happen. The UK has used its powers over the Overseas Territories a number of times in the past, – for example by requiring the Caribbean Territories to abolish the death penalty and decriminalise homosexuality”.

by taxjustice.net

At a time when reporting the truth is critical, your support is essential in protecting it.
Find out how

The European Financial Review

European financial review Logo

The European Financial Review is the leading financial intelligence magazine read widely by financial experts and the wider business community.