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WHAT IS GOOD FOR THE GOOSE, IS GOOD FOR THE..
.European
Governments want to do away with the US as a traditional Tax Haven for
European Citizens and now want the US to collect and send tax money
over to Europe - or in the least start reporting it to foreign
governments. But - What Does This Mean Overall?
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| EUROPE LOBBIES
US FOR A TAX CARTEL; Lower tax rates
and simplification are better ways to stop tax evasion
- NATIONAL
POST, by Veronique de Rugy . Frits Bolkestein, a senior bureaucrat
for the European Commission, just visited the United States in an effort
to convince the Bush administration to join the European Union's proposed
savings tax cartel. This plan, known as the "Savings Tax Directive," is
designed to stop money from escaping Europe's high-tax economies and fleeing
to low-tax economies. And since the United States is a low-tax country
(compared to places like France), the plan would require U.S. financial
institutions to collect private financial data on non-resident investors
so it can be turned over to foreign tax collectors.
..
European politicians believe that it is
unfair for jobs and capital to flee from high-tax countries to low-tax
countries, and that the United States should prop up Europe's welfare states.
The Savings Tax Directive is a significant threat to market-based policy
and fiscal competition and to America's interests.
.
The United States is the best tax haven
in the world. Low taxes and a strong commitment to financial privacy combine
to attract more that US$9-trillion of foreign capital to the U.S. economy.
This inflow of money is a key determinant of U.S. prosperity because this
money is put to work for the nation and produces more jobs, higher standards
of living and general prosperity. America is the Cayman Islands compared
to Europe. Tax revenues consume more than 40% of GDP in Europe, much higher
than the U.S. burden, which is less than 30%. Moreover, the U.S. Congress
repeatedly decided, with few exceptions, not to tax the investment income
of foreigners and not to report this income to foreign governments. And
since European politicians are too greedy to cut taxes, European workers
and investors are wise to invest their money in the United States.
.
Obviously, high-tax nations resent this
competition, which is why they are lobbying the U.S. government to support
the "Saving Tax Directive." The EU initiative seeks to protect uncompetitive
European nations from the discipline of market forces. In particular, it
is an effort to preserve bad tax policy because it assumes that there should
be multiple taxation of income that is saved and invested -- particularly
if the money is invested in the United States. The EU Directive would give
countries like France or Sweden the power to impose oppressive tax rates
on income earned in places like America.
.
The European politicians claim that their
true goal is to reduce tax evasion. As such, they claim that the complete
destruction of financial privacy is the only way to address widespread
tax evasion. Yet real world evidence shows that lower tax rates and tax
simplification are much more effective tools to prevent tax evasion. European
governments should try tax reforms instead of trying to force other nations
to adopt their bad tax policies. In the words of Commissioner Bolkestein,
both the EU and the U.S. need to work much more closely together to frame
legislation that can help capital flow more freely between the EU and the
U.S. However, empirical evidence shows that capital does not
have any problem flowing from Europe to the United States. European politicians
are upset because capital is reluctant to flow from the United States to
Europe, with the exception of low-tax Ireland. Frits Bolkestein is really
trying to negotiate a directive that would reduce the amount of capital
coming to America.
..
The EU tax cartel would have a terrible
effect on the U.S. economy. If the Savings Tax Directive was implemented,
the U.S. economy would lose capital, which would mean fewer jobs and lower
wages. Equally important, an EU victory would have a big impact on America's
ability to reform its tax system in the future. The EU scheme, for instance,
would make a flat tax or some other tax reform plan impossible. In
reality, Commissioner Bolkestein wants U.S. financial institutions to serve
as vassal tax collectors for Europe's welfare states. If implemented, the
EU savings tax cartel initiative would undermine the right of U.S. policy-makers
to determine the tax treatment of income earned inside U.S. borders.
.Veronique de Rugy is a fiscal policy
analyst at the Cato Institute, a Washington D.C.-based public policy organization.
..
EDITORS REPLY:
Finally we see that here is the rub or the exact problem or issue.
Which is to say, both the US and EU are seeing their middle class feeling
with their money to escape both high taxes and high cost of living (compounded
by companies moving manufacturing, jobs and operations elsewhere as well).
As a result, a mad dash to fill up the government coffers in the US and
Europe by chasing down all those terrible so-called tax havens or low tax
jurisdictions. How? By attempting to convince the other nations
in the world to act as a tax reporting and tax-collecting agency, thereby
eliminating the benefit or incentive for someone (or a company) to relocate.
HOWEVER, while we can see the very one-sided issue of doing this with the
smaller developing nations that do not currently have such an internal
problem (excessive socialist programs and high tax burdens on its citizens),
it is another matter altogether when it involves two high tax nations cannibalizing
each other’s tax revenues. Stated another way, what now happens when
France, for example, starts asking the US to collect and send tax payments
to France (and we can say vice-versa)? What happens when we find
out that the end result is the US collecting and sending US$20 Million
to France, yet the tax payments coming back to the US is only US$1 Million?
What about the reverse of France seeing more money going to the US than
what it takes back in? Here is where it really starts to get very
interesting politically. Also, how ironic is it really that the US
is considered to be somewhat of a Tax Haven for Europeans ?
.
All nations are in competition with each
other, and this is both normal and a good thing as well. Meaning,
Canada would like to see new investors, new companies, and new jobs come
their way, as would the US, as would Europe, as would any country.
How do they do that? Simply by providing for a variety of incentives,
lower taxes being just one, to encourage this to happen. What would
be the case and the result when the new jobs and the new investors stop
coming? It is easy enough to beat up on China, Panama, Guatemala,
Singapore, The Dominican Republic, etc., etc., because these countries
have very attractive business and tax incentives in place (or lower labor
costs) as a very general statement, but what happens when the US and Europe
start going after each other? As the article stated, the US
is actually a wonderful tax-haven if you are not an American.
.
We have said this before and it cannot
be stressed enough. The agenda of the OECD and the US is to somehow,
someway stop themselves from going broke. Fair enough, but at the
same time, they are looking to stop competition in world markets and take
away the very incentives from the smaller developing nations that they
themselves had in the past (meaning the economic growth environment that
previously existed in the US, Canada and nations in Europe). All
while stating they are trying to encourage FREE MARKETS, fairness and transparency.
HOWEVER, at the same time, such nations refuse to balance their budgets,
cut back on excessive spending and refuse to see the real problem for what
it is. In other words, many so-called modern and developed nations
are in denial.
.
In brief, it comes down to both an economic
and political struggle between the Socialists and everyone else.
We can also say, between those that truly believe in the Free Market System
and competition vs. those that think excessive government is the answer.
Those that believe in and cherish freedom vs. those that wish to be managed
by some government agency that supposedly knows more about your own best
interests that you do. It comes down to those that think government
handouts are the answer vs. those that wish to find a more permanent non-government
solution through economic prosperity in the private sector. There
is an old saying that sums it all up. Give a starving man a fish
and he starves off hunger for a day (waiting for the next handout).
Teach a man to fish and he has the where with all to solve his hunger problem
on his own – permanently. How do you apply that for a country?
By putting the proper economic, tax and business incentives to encourage
new jobs and new investment, thereby creating an upward tidal wave that
carries the citizens of a society to a better standard of living in the
end. This has already worked in many smaller developing countries
and the proof is in the results (the Dominican Republic is only one example
where we can see this). Not everyone likes this idea, because if
China, for example, offers lower labor costs and lower taxes, that means
that jobs will be lost elsewhere (due to company relocation or the shifting
of manufacturing from the US to China, or we can say from Europe to China
also as a direct illustration).
.
However, since ALL nations have the opportunity
and ability at their disposal to offer incentives for foreign investors
(and they already do, such as tax-free capital gains for foreigners with
US stock brokerage accounts) then it cannot be argued that one particular
nation is engaging in unfair competition. Is it then so unfair for
countries such as Panama or the Dominican Republic to offer tax-free banking
when the US themselves does the same thing for non Americans (with regards to capital gains
on brokerage accounts)??? Or is it that all economic competition
is unfair? How you answer that will tell you if you are a socialist
or not, and might also tell you if you would rather stay and pay or expatriate
to someplace more in line with your thinking.
.
FINAL POINT:
It is not that the US does not like tax havens (they are one) - they just do
want anyone else to be a tax haven (especially when it comes to US citizens). .
. However, it is not over just yet. The very idea of a foreign government acting as either tax collection agent or tax reporting agent for another is in reality a conflict of internal or national interest. Thus, the problem with the practice versus the theory of one world government, and the concept of having all nations (regardless where) enforce tax collection for the industrialized high tax nations currently in economic crisis in terms of their own underfunded and insolvent welfare state programs. Want to know why so many citizens of the US, Canada and Europe are leaving? (Please read What is an Expatriate). . . |