The following i an excerpt from a post on "Naked Capitalism". Please follow link to read the rest.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2013/03/why-does-no-one-speak-of-americas-oligarchs.html
One of the striking elements of the demonization of Cyprus was how it
was depicted as a willing tool of Russian money launderers and
oligarchs. Never mind the fact, as we pointed out, that Cyprus is not a tax haven but a low-tax jurisdiction,
and in stark contrast with the Caymans and Malta, has double-taxation
treaties signed with 46 nations and has (now more likely had) with six
more being ratified. Nor is it much of a tax secrecy jurisdiction,
according to the Financial
Secrecy Index. Confusingly, in the overall ranking, lower numbers are
worse (Switzerland as number 1 is the baaadest) but in the secrecy score
used to derive the rankings, higher is worse, with 100 being utterly
opaque. The total rank is a function of “badness” (secrecy score) and
weight (amount of business done). You’ll notice that all the countries
ranked as worse than Cyprus have secrecy scores more unfavorable than
it, with the exception of Germany, which is a mere 1 point out of 100
less bad, and the UK, which scores considerably lower (Nicholas Shaxson,
author of Treasure Islands, would take issue with that reading, but he
takes a more inclusive view of the boundaries of a financial services
industry. For the UK, thus he not only includes the “state within a
state” of the City of London, but also the UK’s secrecy jurisdictions,
such as the Isle of Man, in his dim view of the UK as well as the US on
secrecy). And even so, its greater volume of hidden activity gives it a
much worse overall ranking. Of countries 21 tp 30, only 3 rank as less
bad on secrecy: Canada, India, and South Korea.
------------------------------------------------
Go there -- read the rest. It's an interesting read, and says what I suspect we have all been thinking.
Ten Economic Questions for 2025
-
Here is a review of the Ten Economic Questions for 2024.
Below are my ten questions for 2025 (I've been doing this online every year
for 20 years!). These...
7 hours ago
No comments:
Post a Comment