OECD-listed offshore centres including BVI compete in services

The lists of tax havens published by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development () (OECD), – especially the so called “grey list” – became the cause of hard battle for business between international financial centres. This competition will probably intensify during this month.

OECD grey list, which includes jurisdictions not fully compliant with international standards on tax transparency, has a sub-division into tax havens and other financial centres. This list is regularly revised, but the only jurisdiction which was moved from the “grey” to the “white list” at this moment is Bermuda. The BVI, the Cayman Islands and Bahrain are, in their turn, very close to meeting the OECD requirement of 12 tax information exchange agreements signed. However, this might be not enough: for example, Cayman will also need to undergo peer review before it can move to the white list.

The Channel Islands, the Isle of Man, Cyprus, the Seychelles are already on the white list, and some of these financial centres are making heavy promotion of their services based on the fact they are identified as top quality and regulatory compliant jurisdictions. For example, the Channel Islands have been lobbying for companies based in grey list centres, like Cayman and BVI, to move to their corporate registry.

The OECD list was requested by the G20 group of large states; all jurisdictions included on both lists will be reviewed at the November meeting of the organisation. The countries which do not comply with the strict requirements by that time will face stringent fiscal sanctions that could harm the economies of some of them.

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