Yahoo –AFP, Jeremy Tordjman, April 8, 2016
Washington (AFP) - From Russia to China, and Britain to Iceland, the revelations of the "Panama Papers" have tarnished officials and the wealthy over the implication that they hide riches offshore.
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| Issues of the German daily "Sueddeutsche Zeitung" featuring the "Panama Papers" with illustrations by German artist Peter M Hoffmann depicting heads of state (AFP Photo/Christof Stache) |
Washington (AFP) - From Russia to China, and Britain to Iceland, the revelations of the "Panama Papers" have tarnished officials and the wealthy over the implication that they hide riches offshore.
But one
group is not there: prominent Americans. US tycoons and politicians are notably
absent in the leaked files of the Panama law offices of Mossack Fonseca, which
created thousands of shell companies worldwide to hide the identities of their
ultimate owners, some of whom may have been evading taxes.
There is
Hollywood mogul David Geffen, the Asylum Records and Dreamworks SKG co-founder.
But there are no Americans comparable to Iceland's prime minister, or henchmen
of the Russian president -- all in the Panama records -- at least in what has
been disclosed so far.
"There
are a lot of Americans, but they are more like private citizens," said
Marina Walker Guevara, deputy director of the International Consortium of
Investigative Journalists which coordinated the investigation and release of
the Panama Papers.
However,
that hardly means Americans have fully embraced financial transparency, she
told AFP.
"It
doesn't show that the US is outside of the offshore system; the US is actually
a big player."
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The Tax
Justice Network's Financial Secrecy Index (AFP Photo/Alain
Bommenel, Jean
Michel Cornu)
|
Other
options
One
possible reason for their small presence in the Panama documents is that US
citizens hoping to hide funds and activities offshore were not drawn to
Spanish-speaking Panama as a haven, when there are options like the British
Virgin islands and the Cayman Islands.
"Americans
have so many tax havens to choose from," said Nicholas Shaxson, author of
"Treasure Islands: Tax Havens and the Men who Stole the World," a
2011 book on secretive centers for hiding money.
Indeed,
Americans do not have to go abroad to hide funds and activities behind
anonymous corporations: they can create them at home.
States like
Delaware and Wyoming allow the creation of such companies, for just a few
hundred dollars, that conceal their ultimate financial beneficiary.
And while US
banks are normally required to "know their customers," they can
bypass that rule and open accounts for shell companies, ensuring total
discretion for someone who wants to move money around quietly.
The US
Treasury is moving to stop the practice, which can be used by arms and drug
traffickers to launder funds and lands the United States in third in the Tax
Justice Network's ranking of the world's least transparent countries, well
above Panama.
"We're
in the last stages of drafting the final rule," a Treasury official told
AFP.
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The most
popular tax havens (AFP Photo/Laurence Saubadu, Jonathan Jacobsen)
|
'Very
frightened'
But there
is another possible reason that Americans are not so visible in the Panama
Papers.
Spurred by
the need to halt huge, blatant tax evasion by Americans using foreign banks,
Washington in recent years has cracked down with lawsuits, arrests and tighter
laws that have targeted both the banks offering safe haven and those hiding
money in them.
Swiss banks
were hit in particular. UBS and Credit Suisse, respectively, had to pay fines
of $780 million and $2.6 billion for having helped US citizens hide money.
The result,
Shaxson said, is that now "there are a few tax havens around the world
that are very frightened of American clients, because they know that the US can
hit them."
Nevertheless,
the seeming absence of Americans from the Panama Papers has fed conspiracy
theories, such as claims the leak of the files was orchestrated by the CIA to
destabilize Russia and other countries.
But Walker
Guevara said there is still a lot to be examined in the trove of 11.5 million
documents that make up the Panama Papers, and there could be more about
Americans in there.
"It's
a huge trove of documents and maybe there's something hiding there that we
haven't found yet. It's a work in progress."
President Obama Just Took a Major Step in Response to the Panama Papers
Switzerland, Singapore join clampdown on bank secrecy (Update)
"@USTreasury has taken new action to prevent more corporations from taking advantage of one of the most insidious tax loopholes" —@POTUS— The White House (@WhiteHouse) April 5, 2016
Related Articles:
President Obama Just Took a Major Step in Response to the Panama Papers
Switzerland, Singapore join clampdown on bank secrecy (Update)



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