PM Urges more action on tax from UK territories: Reuters

YEREVAN, May 21. /ARKA/. Prime Minister David Cameron wrote to leaders of Britain’s offshore territories and other self-governing regions, urging them to sign up to international protocols on information exchange, and improve their transparency.

“With one month to go, this is the critical moment to get our own houses in order,” Cameron said. “I respect your right to be lower tax jurisdictions … But lower taxes are only sustainable if what is owed is actually paid.”

The Cayman Islands, British Virgin Islands and other British overseas territories have become major international financial centres thanks to low taxation, light-touch regulation and limited requirements for those who invest there to disclose information about their affairs.

Big businesses say they use such jurisdictions to help avoid double taxation on international trade, but critics say the territories help companies to avoid paying tax on their profits and to facilitate money laundering and tax evasion on the part of rich individuals.

Some of the 10 countries that received the letter were identified by British tax authorities this month as home to complex tax arrangements.

Cameron asked all the letter’s recipients to sign up to the Multilateral Convention on Mutual Assistance – a protocol developed by the Council of Europe and the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development that facilitates cooperation between states on tax matters.

In addition, Cameron said the territories needed to produce an action plan on how to improve their transparency with respect to ownership of assets and companies.

“Put simply, that means we need to know who really owns and controls each and every company,” he said.

Such steps would make the territories less attractive locations for hiding stolen assets or evading taxes, but are unlikely to affect the kind of shifting of corporate profits that has angered British policymakers and the public, since this rarely involves hiding beneficial ownership.

In early May, Anguilla, Bermuda, the British Virgin Islands, Montserrat and the Turks and Caicos Islands joined the Caymans and Gibraltar in agreeing to provide Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Spain with details of bank accounts held by their citizens in the territories.

The territories receiving the letter were Bermuda, the British Virgin Islands, the Cayman Islands, Gibraltar, Anguilla, Montserrat, the Turks and Caicos Islands, Jersey, Guernsey and the Isle of Man. –0–

spot_img

POPULAR

EDB assessed the reasons for rising inflation in Armenia and maintenance of refinancing rate

Inflation in Armenia accelerated in April amid rising prices for food and non-food products, according to the Eurasian Development Bank's weekly macro review.

Armenian Audit Firm Revenue Increased by 18% to AMD 16.2 Billion in 2025

At the end of 2025, the total revenue of audit firms (a combination of audit and other services) in Armenia amounted to approximately AMD 16.2 billion, representing an increase of approximately 18% compared to the previous year.

A New Level of Insurance Innovation: The Armenian Bureau of Motor Insurers and GAIP Sign a Cooperation Agreement

The Armenian Bureau of Motor Insurers and the international organization Global Association of InsurTech Professionals (GAIP) signed a cooperation agreement on Monday in the field of compulsory motor insurance (CMTPLI) and insurance technologies.

Central Bank of Armenia is discussing the creation of a guarantee fund for small business lending with the Ministry of Economy and the World...

The Central Bank of Armenia, together with the Ministry of Economy and partners from the World Bank, is discussing a mechanism for providing partial guarantees for small and micro businesses through a special guarantee fund.

“Cannot deliver your package”. IDBank warns about fake messages from ‘’HayPost’’

In Armenia, a wave of mass messages is being recorded that exploit trust in the national postal operator HayPost. Attackers use the expectation of the package as a fake reason to steal banking data or install spyware on users’ smartphones.

LATEST NEWS

spot_imgspot_imgspot_img