MEP Giegold: PandoraPapers: Tougher measures against tax evasion and money laundering needed
03 October 2021
“Tax evasion and money laundering continue to flourish through letterbox companies despite all past scandals. The policy measures taken after scandals like the Panama Papers are insufficient..."
New international investigative research by the
International Consortium for Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) on the
subject of tax evasion and money laundering was published today. The
revelations are based on the largest tax data leak of all time. 600 journalists
from 117 countries collaborated on this project. The enormous data set
comprises 11.9 million documents from a total of 14 financial service
providers. The names of numerous celebrities, politicians and
billionaires appear in the records. The records show that tax evasion and
financial crime continue to be possible on a large scale through
letterbox companies and trusts. In the past, revelations like the Panama
Papers had drawn attention to these practices.
MEP Sven Giegold, financial and economic policy spokesperson
of the Greens/EFA group commented:
“Tax evasion and money laundering continue to flourish
through letterbox companies despite all past scandals. The policy
measures taken after scandals like the Panama Papers are insufficient. We
need stricter rules that ensure full transparency and more international
information exchange. Tax authorities must also be able to tax capital
income from abroad on real estate and complex letterbox companies.
International rules make tax evasion for smaller amounts more difficult
today, but the basic problem for large fortunes has remained. Anyone who
has money and insolence can shirk their tax contributions. It cannot be
possible that people can buy themselves out of their tax responsibility.
When it comes to taxation, the rule of law appears to apply to some and
not to others. Tax evasion endangers our democracy as people lose
confidence in the rule of law. This is all the more true when political
elites hide their wealth. Letterbox companies also enable corruption and
money laundering.
The PandoraPapers show that the advances in international
tax cooperation are not enough. The global minimum tax only applies to
large corporations, but not to the letterbox companies of the wealthy and
corrupted. We need full international transparency about the real owners
of letterbox companies and real estate. The international exchange of
information needs to be expanded to identify tax evaders. The new data
leak must be a wake-up call. Global tax fraud fuels global inequality. We
now have to expand and focus the counter dimensions. Thanks once again to
the journalists who have done this research for the common good."
--- https://sven-giegold.de/en/pandora-papers/
Background:
The Guardian on the
PandoraPapers: https://www.theguardian.com/news/2021/oct/03/pandora-papers-biggest-ever-leak-of-offshore-data-exposes-financial-secrets-of-rich-and-powerful
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© Sven Giegold