Accountants may avoid Brussels' reach

Germany lobbies to extend the 2005 savings tax directive to require banks to share information about customers' income from dividend payments, capital gains and possibly even trusts

Written by Penny Sukhraj

Wealthy Britains who stash investments offshore could face a European Union clamp-down – but accountants may still be able to keep offshore earnings from the reach of authorities.

The plans, following the dispute with Liechtenstein over anonymous trust holdings, follow a lobby by Germany to extend the 2005 savings tax directive to cover not just interest payments on cash savings, but to also require banks to share information about customers' income from dividend payments, capital gains and possibly even trusts.

But accountants may be able to maintain the current effect of the rules, by setting up tax free schemes in jurisdictions not signed up to the EU agreement, or using other offshore structures, such as offshore bonds, the Sunday Times reported.

Grant Thornton accountant Mike Warburton said that when the sales directive came into force, huge amounts were pulled out of offshore accounts and brought back into the UK or shifted to tax havens that were not caught by the rules, such as Dubai and Singapore.

'These are sophisticated financial centres, they remain outside the rules for now and non-domiciles who genuinely want to keep their financial affairs secret may see some benefit in setting up vehicles in these countries,' Warburton said.

The savings tax directive currently forces tax authorities to reveal information about those who earned income in offshore accounts but this only affects interest from bank accounts. Dividends from shares, discretionary trusts, structured products and offshore insurance remain unaffected, leading to billions directed into complicated products that are outside the rules.

Further reading:

IMF gives Liechtenstein qualified praise

Liechtenstein effect here to stay

UK backs European tax haven offensive

Enjoyed this article? Help spread the word:

Comments

Reader comments for this story

White papers

Related jobs

Spotlight

Find a place in the sun with YP

May issue of Young Professional features a guide to living...

James Thompson, Ecosecurities CFO

Profile: James Thompson, CFO of Ecosecurities

James Thomspon couldn't have started his job at a worse...

Practice careers guide: big versus small

Is big really best or would working for a medium...

Find your next job

Find your next job
Salary Checker

Search white papers

Search white papers

Have your say

Has the credit crunch made you fear for your job?
Yes, my company says jobs will go
Maybe, if things get worse, I could be hit
No, business is quite stable

Job of the week

More finance jobs...

Your next job