Showing posts with label Attac. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Attac. Show all posts

Friday, 13 March 2009

Attac and Tax Haven Protestors Target Banks in Austria and Luxembourg

With the G20 summit nearly upon us, in Austria and Luxembourg, tax protestors took to the streets with banners and targeted the banks, and bank staff were advised to use public entrances.

While not on the OECD blacklist, EU members Austria and Luxembourg do not share information on savings account holders from other European countries with their tax authorities. But while Belgium is prepared to lift its banking secrecy rules, Luxembourg and Austria remain determined to keep theirs despite growing international pressure. "Banking secrecy is not the same thing as a tax haven," Luxembourg Prime Minister Jean-Claude Juncker told journalists in Prague. "Unilaterally lifting banking secrecy will not contribute to transparency, but will only divert financial flows and prejudice the Austrian economy," said Austrian finance ministry spokesman Harald Waiglein said in Vienna.


Well, the first paragraph is a fiction concocted by me, the rest is from genuine news stories. There has been a dearth of protests in Austria or Luxembourg, which might even lead some people like me to harbour suspicions that the recent protests have been against "soft targets", and there is an element of hypocrisy involved.

Is it any wonder Swiss banking expert Professor Teodoro Cocca believes that European leaders have moved the battleground to the G20 to neatly sidestep dissenters from within the European Union, such as Austria and Luxembourg?

Attac itself realises that the lack of pressure here is setting a bad example:

The "Savings Directive" of the EU has to be extended to all capital incomes (at present only interest payments), to legal persons (at present only natural persons) and the automatic exchange of information mechanism to Austria, Belgium and Luxembourg (at present 24 countries). The closure of these loopholes is a condition to exercise credible pressure on other tax heavens like Switzerland or Liechtenstein to give up their bank secrecy and cooperate in an international information exchange.

But have there been any protests? None that I can find, despite the fact that Attac Austria was founded over six years ago.

Over in Jersey, the protestors decided to go to work on Comic Relief's Red Nose day, bringing a halt to the local bank employees (especially counter staff) at the St Helier branch of Lloyds TSB  who work to raise money for Comic Relief.
And in a greater act of ineptitude, the UK main office of Christian Aid cheerfully didn't liaise with the local branch before attending and giving a presentation against Jersey as a tax haven; apparently Andy Thewlis, the local branch officer, has had his phone red hot with people ringing up. Losing local support is really going to benefit third world countries, isn't it?

I think that Attac's case may well have a good deal of merit, although as a mathematician, I am annoyed at the way that "invisible figures" are conjured up out of a statistical void on "missing millions". It is what statisticians call "dark figures", and that kind of methodologically suspect knowledge is one of my pet hates. A real figure is Sir Fred Goodwin's pension per annum. How much toxic debt the banks still have is a "dark figure", because until properly audited,   no one knows; it is largely guesswork, which is why the stock exchanges are in turmoil. The "missing millions" in banks in offshore - which for these purposes includes Delaware - take note President Obama, Austria and Luxembourg, as well as Jersey and other jurisdictions, is unknown. Some may be legitimate money, other may not be, and how much of it is taxable we can only guess.

Methods of estimating often have a way of reflecting the assumptions of the estimator, as the "dark figures" on crime show. As one commentator notes:

the dark figures of crime unknown to the police is variously estimated. To base criminological theory, or social policy for that matter, on the majority of official figures is an exercise in "guesstimates", and tealeaf gazing. Meanwhile, various groups with special pleadings regularly, and understandably, parade their 'statistics' to show that their section of the community needs resources or their agency has had such and such a success rate

Monday, 13 August 2007

Stuart Syvret

Reading this (belows), a few notes:

1. As the JDA turned into a political farce in the last election - a breakaway Centre Party showing they couldn't hold it together, a drunk Geoff Southern on Election night doing a George Brown impersonation (old Labour, for those who remember), who needs friends like those? Jersey has a long tradition of independent candidates, and that Syvret did not jump on the party bandwagon (like Paul Le Claire, who has learned better) is in his favour.

2. I think that Attac and Richard Murphy sometimes say important things, but that doesn't mean I would want to agree with them all the time, or indeed much of the time. But it is useful to ask them what their arguments would be, even if one doesn't agree with them. I don;t particularly think Richard Dawkin's arguments (or rhetoric) is that good, but I am reading his latest book for myself and some of his arguments have merit and are worth stating. I think Syvret may have given misleading overtures to them, especially when he was feeling depressed, but to mention them as an argument is totally without merit. I think that anyone who resorts to ad hominem arguments based on an interpretation of emails (which are not cited) is not the kind of person I would care for on my side.






http://www.isthisjersey.com/news.php

Should he stay or should he go? The Stuart and Frank or Punch and Judy Show.

We have been here before with calls for the resignation of Senator Syvret. Undoubtedly there won't be a resignation, as Syvret loves the lime light and will savour the martyrdom of a vote of no confidence.

In the past what saved Syvret was public support. That may still be there to a degree, but one certain thing is that he has lost all his friends on the political left. Having failed to give any support to the JDA in the 2005 elections, for denouncing ATTAC and having fallen out with his adviser Richard Murphy and best friend John Christensen, there really is no one to help this organise his defence against the big bad wolf. This time there will be no demonstrations outside Cyril Le Marquand House or the States Building. The lesson is that you can't expect to dish your friends and then expect them to help you when you need them.

Sit back. Enjoy the hanging.

Monday, 18 December 2006

Recent Attac comments on Jersey on their website


There is a lot of good stuff on the employment law, the minimum wage, and the high cost of housing. However, I would make the following points:

Corrupt governments, companies and individuals in rich and poor countries stealing money from their own people and investing it for their own gain in tax havens like Jersey.

Details, details please. If there is information, it should be stated - in the same way that Private Eye does not hesitate to do, otherwise this is just so much mud-slinging. Private Eye always gets facts, which is why it is so widely read. Otherwise there is just rhetoric, which may or may not be true.

There are few outlets for public opinion in Jersey, but we see ourselves as an important voice for democracy and the rights of global citizens.

Indeed! I am surprised "false consciousness" or the idea that the masses are led by the nose has not surfaced. If people were so concerned about the States, they would readily attend any organisation, and it would generate its own newsletter, which would get wide distribution outside official circles; after all, that is what happened in the Occupation under much more extreme circumstances (and that was not a pseudo-dictatorship, it was the real thing when possession of news sent you to concentration camps!)! The early days of the JADA shows that there is certainly some concern there, but the evaporation of support at the Polls shows that just because an organisation claims to speak for the people, it doesn't mean the people want that voice!

The States of Jersey's political assembly consists of 53 independently elected members, of which 12 are Senators with an island wide mandate, 29 Deputies who are elected on a parochial mandate and 12 Constables who take their place in the assembly as a right of being elected leader of their respective parish. The assembly also has three ex-officio members appointed by the Queen of England who are the Attorney General, Solicitor General and the Dean of Jersey, who is the head of the Church of England in Jersey. They have the right to address the assembly, but not the right to vote. The assembly is lead by the Bailiff and Deputy
Bailiff, who are unelected to the assembly but can vote in favour of the status quo. The Queen also appoints a Lieutenant Governor to oversee her interests in the Island. In our opinion, the States of Jersey Assembly is nothing more than a pseudo-dictatorship, especially as any criticism is not tolerated and rubbished by the local partisan news media.


The jump from "elected" to "pseudo-dictatorship" takes my breath away. At least Chesterton knew how to put together a sensible argument about the deficiencies of "representation" in democracy, but then his excellent arguments apply equally to most so-called democratic governments. I would say the UK had even more of a pseudo-dictatorship than Jersey. As for the EU, with the EU Commissioners not directly elected in any fashion like MEPs, this is even less of a democracy.

Jersey had a gross national income for 2004 of just over £3 billion (€4.47 billion) giving Jersey a gross national income of £29,000 (€43,900) per capita, which is the second highest in the world after Luxembourg.

Interesting, especially as Luxembourg always features in lists of offshore centres too! And at the heart of the EU as well. That could have been mentioned!

Jersey's fiscal policy is going through a period of change. Over the next four years,it will maintain a 20% personal income tax for individuals, and combined employer/employee social security contributions at 12.5%, reduce corporate income tax to 0% and implement a goods and services tax at 3% with no exemptions. Attac&TJN believe that Jersey's fiscal policy impacts unfairly on
citizens from the lower socio-economic classes and is unsustainable in the long term. We have recommended increasing social security contributions to meet the demands of social protection and repealing the goods and services tax and implementing a textbook progressive income tax system.


1. The impact of 20 means 20 will in fact work as a progressive system.

2. Increasing social security contribitions also impacts on the lowest people, and if it becomes two high, it becomes a tax twice, as the monies deducted from income for social security are also subject to taxation, which is surely an iniquitous sitation, and one which would have to be addressed. To use social security as a form of taxation, without limits, is simply to introduce a stealth tax.

3. Lastly, any critique of GST at 3% impacting on the lower income groups is also logically a critique of the entire system of VAT across the EU, because that is precisely what VAT does. Are Attac groups in the UK and France taking the same united stance? It would be nice to know!

Utilising the internationally recognised benchmark of assessing relative poverty at 60% of median income, Jersey currently has 46% of single pensioners, 64% of single mothers and their children living in relative poverty. In addition, 25% of all Jersey homes need support from the States to make ends meet.

I'd like to know where they get their median income figures from! My persistent gripe with the States Statistic unit is that they tend to only give arithmetic means, not medians.

As we have seen from the above narrative Jersey is being run by a pseudodictatorship who are totally committed to formulating and implementing social and economic policies that benefit the rich and cripple the poor from a local to global perspective. Jersey is following the neo-liberal models of the United States of America and the United Kingdom in reducing direct taxation on individuals and companies, whilst raising indirect taxation in the form of a goods and services tax, which will have a detrimental effect on the lower socio-economic classes. Several years ago, Jacques Harel of Attac Saint Malo warned us that the first casualties of tax havens were the indigenous people and especially the poor, and his advice has certainly proved correct.

Maybe I missed something important in this argument. I believe Jersey is looking at GST of 3%, the UK has 17.5%, and France has 19.6 %. Has Jacques Harel something to comment on that? Why is France missing from this list when its indirect taxation is greater than that of the UK? And on the subject of cripplying policies, has France does anything about the corruption endemic in the Common Agricultural Policy, which sucks EU funds into a black hole which the auditors refuse to sign off, so bad is the accounting.





http://www.ptclub.com/eurobanking.html

Luxembourg

The RTL media empire which developed out of Radio Luxembourg has made entertainment the second largest industry in this rather staid but extremely beautiful principality. Its other claim to fame is that statistically it is the richest country in the world. Although they have taxes, nobody seems to work too hard on collecting them. The largest industry, of course, is finance. Luxembourg's history as a tax haven goes back to its 1929 holding company legislation, but as a founder member of the European Union it is under great pressure on bank secrecy issues and is having to readjust its role to compete with the likes of London and Frankfurt rather than Nassau and Road Town. Nonetheless, for non-EU residents Luxembourg gets our highest recommendation. Everything is super efficient, less snobbish than Switzerland, and personal accounts with internet banking can be opened by ptCLUB through the mail for just $500. In this country banking secrecy is part of the national culture more than anywhere else we know. As a small, rich country it has avoided the socialist problems of Switzerland where some politicians want to abolish bank secrecy. And while the Swiss apply a 35% withholding tax, investments in Luxembourg are tax free for non residents. And where else but in our beloved Luxembourg can you find the biggest banks disguising their plastic cards as guides to global time zones, or providing paper shredders for client use in branches? We recommend you to order a Luxembourg account today by contacting ptCLUB.