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The following article reproduced at the request of Green Monkey – David, Barbados Underground

Panama_LeakSNIP
Around a decade ago, I was writing a book about six countries along a stretch of west Africa’s oil-soaked coast, running from Angola up to Nigeria. Despite hundreds of billions of dollars in oil revenues, their people didn’t seem to be better off. In the case of Angola, then just starting to recover from an oil- and diamond-fuelled war, it was surely worse off than if no natural resources had been discovered. I wrote an article about corruption in west Africa’s oil-producing states, and a few days later got a letter from David Spencer, a US attorney who had worked with a big global bank in Latin America. He invited me to visit him in New York. Several months later we met and, before we had finished our starters, Spencer was getting worked up about matters that were not at all on my agenda: accounting rules, US tax exemptions, transfer pricing – and some curious legal arrangements in Delaware, a small US state roughly halfway between New York and Washington.

What on earth did any of this have to do with Nigeria? Realisation began to dawn: Spencer was telling me that the US was itself a giant tax haven, and that this was intensely relevant for west Africa. He explained why. During the Vietnam war, the US was spending more money overseas than it was earning there, and dollars were flowing out. To finance its growing deficit, the US wanted to lure foreign dollars back home. It did this by turning itself into a haven: creating tax benefits for foreigners. The idea was to start hoovering up capital flight and dirty money from around the world; looted west African oil money would do nicely.

So the US has been fighting hard against foreign tax havens, to crack down on its own tax cheats. At the same time the US is a big part of the world’s problem, with Wall Street banks profiting from American willingness to help foreign tax cheats. Britain’s own array of satellite havens – the Cayman Islands, British Virgin Islands, Bermuda, Jersey, all of which sport the Queen on their banknotes – are part of the same problem.

Source:
http://www.theguardian.com/business/2015/jun/19/tax-havens-money-cayman-islands-jersey-offshore-accounts


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153 responses to “Follow the Money: inside the world’s tax havens”


  1. Today, 8 July 2015, WikiLeaks releases more than 1 million searchable emails from the Italian surveillance malware vendor Hacking Team, which first came under international scrutiny after WikiLeaks publication of the SpyFiles. These internal emails show the inner workings of the controversial global surveillance industry.

    https://wikileaks.org/hackingteam/emails/?q=barbados+%21rcs&mfrom=&mto=&title=&notitle=&date=&nofrom=&noto=&count=50&sort=0#searchresult

  2. Lawrence James Bauer, CFA Avatar
    Lawrence James Bauer, CFA

    Please note that the report says that the activities going on in “tax havens” are entirely legal, and that most of the people setting up these “shell” companies are under no restrictions under their laws from doing so.

    In the US, many thousands of companies with headquarters and factories in Minnesota, Iowa, Colorado, Maine, etc, all incorporate in Delaware. Why is that? Aren’t virtually every large US corporation, in effect, a “shell” corporation with no operations in the jurisdiction in which they are incorporated?

    If criminals make use of these legal possibilities, why is the tax haven at fault? Isn’t the real problem in the country where the criminals operate (or even rule the country)?


  3. The Panama Papers – What Happens When Corruption Is Systemic
    by Joe Brewer

    As the media is quite likely to frame the Panama Papers as a few bad apples using legal financial instruments, I would like to offer an alternative that keeps our mental eye on the ball. What really matters is the architecture of wealth extraction that has been systematically built up in every country around the world. I use the word ‘architecture’ intentionally here for two reasons: (1) to remind us that there were architects who intentionally created this exploitative system (it did not arise naturally or by accident); and (2) the purpose of this system was to hoard as much wealth as possible in the hands of a tiny elite.

    This is what my colleagues at The Rules have been calling the Story of Poverty Creation when we write about the unnamed development agenda that goes by the name of economic growth. Ask yourself the question “What really grows, when we grow the economy?” and ponder how it is that three years ago there were 300 people who had the same aggregate wealth as 3 billion. Today it is even worse — 62 individuals have the same total wealth as 3,700,000,000.

    We are fools to think this happened by accident. There was a long history of colonialism and slavery that gave certain Western nations a huge amount of wealth that has since been used to rig global institutions like the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank in a manner that keeps this historic trend going strong. In the mid-20th Century it was the banana republics, where US corporations benefited from the displacement of democratic leaders with despotic dictators throughout Latin America (with help from a network of financiers and government aid). The decades that followed saw the rise of “free trade” zones and “structural adjustment” programs that guaranteed a one-way transfer of wealth from poor countries to the pockets of the extreme rich in wealthy countries (while ignoring the colonial period that set up this economic advantage in the first place).

    http://commondreams.org/views/2016/04/04/panama-papers-what-happens-when-corruption-systemic

  4. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    Doesn’t include Bim. From the Gov of the CB
    Next is the financial services sector which has been facing “many challenges” and Worrell thinks its medium term prospects are very good. He based that conclusion on the fact: “We are not a tax haven. We do not exist to enable people to avoid paying taxes in Canada or wherever activity originates.

    Thx to WW&C…http://www.nationnews.com/nationnews/news/79200/headlines-worrell-york-update-economy

  5. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Delaware, home to the Duponts, all credit card companies are headquartered there, all banking operations, it’s the centre of financial secrecy.


  6. Disgraceful BBC Panorama Propaganda Hides Grim Truth About Britain
    By Craig Murray

    Richard Bilton of the BBC today exposed himself as the most corrupt and bankrupt of state media shills – while pretending to be fronting an expose of corruption. There could not be a more perfect example of the western state and corporate media pretending to reveal the Panama leak data while actually engaging in pure misdirection.

    In a BBC Panorama documentary entitled Tax Havens of the Rich and Powerful Exposed, they actually did precisely the opposite. The BBC related at length the stories of the money laundering companies of the Icelandic PM and Putin’s alleged cellist. The impression was definitely given and reinforced that these companies were in Panama.

    Richard Bilton deliberately suppressed the information that all the companies involved were in fact not Panamanian but in the corrupt British colony of the British Virgin Islands. At no stage did Bilton even mention the British Virgin Islands.

    SNIP

    In deliberately obscuring the key role of the British money-laundering base of British Virgin Islands in these transactions, the BBC have demonstrated precisely why the entire database has to be released to the scrutiny of the people, rather than being filtered by the dubious honesty of state and corporate journalists. The BBC targeting of two very low level British minions at the end of their programme does not alter this.

    https://www.craigmurray.org.uk/archives/2016/04/disgraceful-bbc-panorama-propaganda-hides-grim-truth-about-britain/


  7. Countries in glass houses !!!!!!
    How can we in good conscience slag off the power mongers of the world when we have created our own little tax haven righ here.
    Cahill energy was given a 30 year tax free deal worth a $$$BILLION ++
    They didn’t use Panama but then the channel islands ” Guernsey ” is just as currupt in hiding assets and tax avoidance.
    The Blenheim group are just as adept as any trust company in Panama.
    So let’s not sit in our glass house looking out and throw proverbial rocks.


  8. So are any of our political class mentioned in the Panama Papers?

    Do any of our traditional financial elite (those who benefit form generous tax payed funded contracts, and tax payer funded concessions) have money in those British Virgin Island accounts?


  9. http://panamapapers.sueddeutsche.de/en/
    Panama Papers: the secrets of dirty money

  10. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    I believe someone mentioned Butch Stewart’s company or ies asreinvolved in the Panama brouhaha and what a haha it will be..lol, but is anyone surprised.

    As soon as Barbados’ government esgerly jumped into bed with him, giving him decades of their people’s labor in tax concessions., you knew something is beyond rotten with this businessman. ..lol

  11. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    *are involved.

  12. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    The small fish politicians and business people on the island are only “rich and famous and celebrities” …….in their own minds, if however, the particularly known greedy ones managed to buy a shell company in a convoluted way, say through South East Asia, for those born in India and the Middle East, who anglicised their names, but can still use their Indian or Middle Eastern names outside of Barbados for business transactions….we may very well get much to laugh about later.

    It’s early days yet, not a full 48 hours since Panama Leaks, investigations take months, but most of the work has already been done by international journalists, real journalists…lol

    Money laundering and corruption are crimes against the people, the leaders in Barbados dont seem to think so, but I want to witness them learning that the hard way.

    Come out things.


  13. Business | Tue Apr 5, 2016 6:12am EDT Related: WORLD, REGULATORY NEWS, BREAKINGVIEWS
    Panama Papers probes opened, China limits access to news on leaks

    Authorities across the globe have opened investigations into the activities of the world’s rich and powerful after a cache of leaked documents from a Panamanian law firm showed possible wrongdoing using offshore company structures.

    The “Panama Papers” have cast light on the financial arrangements of high profile politicians and public figures and the companies and financial institutions they use for such activities. Among those named in the documents are friends of Russian President Vladimir Putin and relatives of the leaders of China, Britain, Iceland and Pakistan, and the president of Ukraine.

    Leading figures and financial institutions responded to the massive leak of more than 11.5 million documents with denials of any wrongdoing as prosecutors and regulators began a review of the reports from the investigation by the U.S.-based International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) and other media organizations.

    http://www.reuters.com/article/us-panama-tax-idUSKCN0X10C2


  14. Barbados is familar with Credit Suisse and there HSBC, they keep cropping up.

    Credit Suisse and HSBC, two of the world’s largest wealth managers, on Tuesday dismissed suggestions they were actively using offshore structures to help clients cheat on their taxes.

  15. CAMPION......CAMPION.......CAMPION!!! Avatar
    CAMPION……CAMPION…….CAMPION!!!

    david – this going to get messy for some local politicians here in barbados, fairly quickly as well. a few of them are known to have friends who religiously travelled on ‘official’ business to panama for the last 5 years.
    it won’t take the opposition long to hire a investigator in Panama to look into whether ‘certain’ people are deep in this shite.

  16. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    So why do ALL these banks have companies registered and emploees working In Guernsey, Jersey Islem etc, etc.

    Lol….shit is starting to spread closer and closer to Caribbean islands…wstch out for the fallout, I would imsgine that it cant cost more than a couple million to buy a shell company…lol

    What a gift…lol…dudes, real journalists said, they do not want any money, only certain protections..lol

  17. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    The names of those coming out in this Panama Leaks may want to remember Manuel Noriega…indigestion anyone, got milk.


  18. @champion

    We will see!


  19. @David, can you or anyone translate ”

    Stai pensando a una vacanza speciale dal sapore caraibico? Barbados è il posto giusto per un’estate alla grande! Un’isola un po’ British e un po’ Bajan, da scoprire in due, con gli amici o con la famiglia! Per te, relax in spiagge da sogno lambite da acque cristalline, escursioni nella foresta, spot perfetti per gli sport acquatici, un pizzico di cultura a Bridgetown, Patrimonio Mondiale dell’Umanità, e la sera una movida irresistibile tra Soca, Calypso e Rum! E poi l’evento più coinvolgente dell’estate, il Crop Over Festival, che fino al 3 agosto celebra il passato coloniale dell’isola. Preferisci prenotare un pac

    chetto di viaggio chiavi in mano? Scopri le offerte volo+soggiorno dei Tour Operator, 7 notti a partire da Euro 880! Ami organizzare il tuo viaggio in maniera indipendente? Prenota l’alloggio su BookBarbadosNow: per te sconti fino al 40% su hotel, ville, B&B e appartamenti! Qualunque sia il tuo stle di vacanza, Barbados ha quello che fa per te!”


  20. @David King, Did Barbados buy the Phoebe spy equipment and software from the Italians as suggested by the wiki leaks cable

  21. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Translation

    Planning a special vacation Caribbean flavour? Barbados is the place for a summer. An island some British and a little Bajan, discover the two, with friends or with your family! For you, relax in Heavenly beaches lapped by crystal clear waters, hiking in the forest, the perfect spot for water sports, a bit of culture in Bridgetown, a world heritage site, and in the evening an irresistible nightlife between Soca, Calypso and Rum! And then the most engaging event of the summer, the Crop Over Festival, which until August 3 celebrates the colonial past of the island. Book a travel package turnkey pac? Discover the offers of Tour operators, flight 7 nights from Euro 880! Ami organizing your trip independently? Book your accommodation on BookBarbadosNow: for you discounts up to 40% on hotels, villas, BB and apartments! Whatever your style of vacation, Barbados has what you’re looking for! “


  22. @ell Well & Consequences April 5, 2016 at 7:16 AM “I would imsgine that it cant cost more than a couple million to buy a shell company…lol”

    I was reading another source last night and apparently a shell company can be bought for as little as $1,000 USD. So next time your Social Security pension comes in you can buy yourself a brand new off shore company and maybe get to rub shoulders or bank accounts with the rich and famous.

    But the extra services of fancy lawyers and accountants cost more…a whole lot more.

    Lol!!!


  23. We should agree that this Panama leak will force the world to change the rules of the game as it relates to offshore business. It exposes the fickle nature of the business.


  24. Yes David and that is why Bajan Brainiacs should be creating alternative income generating industries and activities.


  25. Well Well & Consequences April 5, 2016 at 5:29 AM #

    I believe someone mentioned Butch Stewart’s company or ies asreinvolved in the Panama brouhaha and what a haha it will be..lol, but is anyone surprised.

    As soon as Barbados’ government esgerly jumped into bed with him, giving him decades of their people’s labor in tax concessions., you knew something is beyond rotten with this businessman. ..lol

    See

    http://www.sandals.com/contact/worldwide/

    WorldwidemRepresentative
    Unique Travel Corp.

    Calle Aquilino De Guardia, No. 8
    Panama, Republic of Panama
    1-800-SANDALS

    From Terms and Conditions at http://www.sandals.com/general/legal/

    LIMITATIONS PERIODS: NO SUIT SHALL BE MAINTAINABLE AGAINST UNIQUE TRAVEL, ANY HOTEL OR HOTEL MANAGEMENT COMPANY, SRI, THEIR AFFILIATES, SUBSIDIARIES, DIRECTORS, OFFICERS, EMPLOYEES, OR AGENTS RELATING TO PERSONAL INJURY, ILLNESS OR DEATH OR LOSS OR DAMAGE TO PROPERTY, UNLESS WRITTEN NOTICE OF THE CLAIM, WITH PARTICULARS, IS ADDRESSED TO UNIQUE TRAVEL CORP. ATTENTION: CLAIMS, CALLE AQUILINO DE GUARDIA, NO. 8, IGRA BUILDING, PANAMA, REPUBLIC OF PANAMA AND IS RECEIVED WITHIN SIX MONTHS AFTER THE DEATH OR LOSS OR DAMAGE TO PROPERTY, OR THE ONSET OF THE INJURY OR ILLNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL SUCH SUIT BE MAINTAINABLE UNLESS COMMENCED WITHIN ONE YEAR AFTER THE DEATH, LOSS OR DAMAGE TO PROPERTY, OR THE ONSET OF THE INJURY OR ILLNESS

    So, how could Barbados’ government have known before eagerly jumping into bed with Butch?

    A bit of due diligence by Googling.

    Now if this (or any future) Governement wants out of the deal (what ever that is) can sue him in Panama.


  26. While world governments are refashioning tax laws (including our brilliant MoF) to cast a wider net so as to capture (locally) coconut vendors, nut sellers, ZR owners and the self employed etc. even to the point of stepping up personal audits, the same politicians and wealthy are busy finding ways and means of hiding their vast personal wealth to avoid paying tax or as little as possible.

    After years of brainwashing we (the idiots) have been led to believe that it is honorable to have government (pimps) send us (human traffic) out to work and bring back to them, vast sums of our earnings under the title of “tax”. We are constantly being told the we are living about our means. Some people work two and three jobs in order to pay these (pimps) and still retain barely enough to survive. Prostitutes are afforded a better deal.

    For years, Hong Kong while under administration of the British, was considered a world financial center and home to the largest block of offshore banking institutions in the world yet not a single country saw anything wrong with Hong Kong as a tax friendly jurisdiction. Look at the attitude today toward tax friendly jurisdictions in the Caribbean. Talk about bullying!

    You can sing all the songs you wish glorifying the paying of personal tax but remember that extortionist do the same thing under the guise of providing “protection” to the extorted. When a company like Apple, held up as a paragon of corporate success saw it necessary to seek out a tax friendly jurisdiction in order to grow to its immense size, why should you and I wear the flag of virtue by paying taxes to the oppressors.

  27. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Simple…since this is getting closer to home, we brtter sue Butch …lol


  28. @David April 5, 2016 at 10:05 AM #

    “We should agree that this Panama leak will force the world to change the rules of the game as it relates to offshore business. It exposes the fickle nature of the business.”

    Indeed!!!

    See: Toronto Star Editorial

    Crack down on global tax havens: Editorial

    http://www.thestar.com/opinion/editorials/2016/04/04/crack-down-on-global-tax-havens-editorial.html

    “Apart from cracking down on outright cheats, the major economies need to rethink tax treaties that allow jurisdictions such as Barbados, Costa Rica, Cyprus, Hong Kong, British territories like the British Virgin Islands, Ireland, Luxembourg, the Netherlands and Switzerland to flourish as tax havens. There needs to be a lot more transparency and accountability about the tens of trillions of dollars that are being routed through these havens, or parked there, to avoid paying taxes. The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development has drawn up plans to address global tax avoidance by multinational corporations, but it’s very much a work in progress.

    There’s some concern, too, that Canada is adding to the global problem by making it too easy to create shell companies here.

    Welcome as the Trudeau crackdown is, it has barely begun to address the damage dark money is doing by sapping national treasuries, abetting crime and compounding tax injustice. Ottawa can push harder in the direction of fairness, and must.”

    As someone, Ping Pong I think, said – These are early days – much more to come.

    As Barbados is the preferred offshore jurisdiction for Canadians’ tax avoidance planning; Freundel, Chris, Donville et al have got their work cut out for them to try to defend the industry that is the second largest source of government revenue and FX.


  29. The richest 1% own more than 99% of world’s population. http://www.euronews.com/2016/01/18/the-richest-1-percent-own-more-than-99-percent-of-world-s-population/

    And we will be shortly lining up in droves so that the BRA can milk us. Nothing like a willing sheep.

  30. Due Diligence Avatar

    David

    I guess DD should refrain from posting any further comments about the motives of Barbados’ new best friend and chief financier, or they will will order WordPress to make BU disappear.

    China censors ‘groundless’ Panama Papers’ reports on hidden wealth of leaders’ families

    http://www.thestar.com/news/world/2016/04/05/china-censors-groundless-panama-papers-reports-on-hidden-wealth-of-leaders-families.html


  31. @ Due Diligence who wrote, ” Freundel, Chris, Donville et al have got their work cut out for them to try to defend the industry”

    They should focus on finding NEW industries and income generating activities to benefit BARBADOS.

    They can start by considering this. Barbados spends 5 times more on imported goods than it exports.


  32. The writing is on the wall.

    Barbados cannot GAMBLE on the continuation as a Low Tax Jurisdiction. The risk is two great when you are a two trick pony.

  33. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    One trick you mean…lol


  34. Tourism is also a trick pony as is Low Tax. That makes two. lol


  35. “Panama Papers

    Revealed: the tycoons and world leaders who built secret UK property empires”

    http://www.theguardian.com/news/2016/apr/05/panama-papers-world-leaders-tycoons-secret-property-empires

  36. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    I will remind again, governments biggest challenge globally is not levying taxes, but COLLECTING them.
    They are continually competing against each other.
    This competition [tax war?], between competing tax jurisdictions, has been going on for years.
    Like any competition, it has two sides, the winners and the losers.
    It gets confusing, because rarely do any two players abide by the same rules. And the rules are constantly changing.
    There is a lot of posturing, largely to scare people into playing the game “your way”.
    The object is to get people, or their companies, to pay tax to your jurisdiction.
    The prize is money.

    The current issue, is one of the many sub-players in this global competition, had information stored such that it could be hacked [leaked?]
    We likely wouldn’t be so happy if the leak were 11.5 million medical files?
    The competition will not stop.
    Sub-players will now be forced to convince clients how their document storage is secure.
    And there will be a host of new rules, which can be avoided or ignored as needed, to attempt to convey the impression that collecting tax jurisdictions really give a shit about the sources of funds.
    As the winner, you cannot concern yourself with who lost.


  37. NorthernObserver April 5, 2016 at 2:23 PM #

    “Sub-players will now be forced to convince clients how their document storage is secure.”

    Thankfully, with Government’s IT capability, Barbados’ offshore clients can feel comfortable that their information is secure.

  38. NorthernObserver Avatar
    NorthernObserver

    @DD
    hopefully those actually involved, versus the regulators/facilitators have their own servers and security

    Sure the breach in panama was MF’s, not the gov’t


  39. Look out!

    http://www.theguardian.com/news/2016/apr/05/justice-department-panama-papers-mossack-fonseca-us-investigation

    “There is no doubt that the problem of global tax avoidance generally is a huge problem,” he told reporters at the White House on Tuesday. “The problem is that a lot of this stuff is legal, not illegal.” – President Obama

  40. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Lol…oh it’s going to be a doozie…encroaching on an already well established financial secrecy avoidance to pay taxes….someone is going to hurt. Destroying documents that could be evidence, worse.

  41. Well Well & Consequences Avatar
    Well Well & Consequences

    Due Diligence…are you kidding, the supreme court got a help desk, but get very little IT help, alwsys dow, imagine the government departments…must be a hackers paradise, as a matter of fact, did they not say that the supreme court’s website was hacked at one time…..


  42. “There’s always going to be illicit movement of funds but we shouldn’t make it legal.”

    -President Obama

    Obama slams offshore tax schemes, havens

    The president’s comments come as as the Treasury Department unveils new regulations to make "tax inversions" less appealing

    on.msnbc.com|By MSNBC


  43. It is interesting, the old saying ‘whuh come [roun, guh ‘roun’, certainly is being shown to hold true.

    This is now exposed by the interestingly and flamingly titled ‘Panama Papers’ and also, by the current Presidential Primaries.

    The Panama Papers are important in so much as they evidence the hypocrisy of the leaders of specific countries that are pushing relentlessly for the apparent disbandment of international offshore centres. Actually, there are many terms for these centres, but let us stay with what is the most appropriate and clear.

    That Barbados and other jurisdictions have borne the brunt of vociferous and unrelenting attacks, while specific jurisdictions, including the same Panama, Delaware, Vermont and other effective but less well known centres have continued their actions unabated, is reflective of the hypocrisy and canny manipulations behind the scenes.

    It is therefore fitting, that an expose should highlight the reality, to wit, that tax avoidance and in some cases evasion (the second term to which Barbados et al have not been a party to), is not gone, is very active and contrary to what some would like the general populace’s’ think, is not going anywhere.

    The reality is that Barbados et al are being targeted, not as a matter of principle, but as a matter of allocation of resources, is clear for all to see.

    The old saying of ‘one rule for the Meades and another for the Persians’ rings true, it is all a game, not the truth, not reality.

    Further in this vein of thought, the attacks on such whistleblowers, as Snowden et al, who are being painted as criminals, add to the evidence of manipulation of both events and public perception. Because such as Snowden bring to the fore, the reality, which is not to be known, by the likes of the ordinary, by the likes of the general populace’s’.

    How can those leaders who tout tax transparency, be completely against such as Snowden, who themselves champion transparency at all levels.

    That is blatantly hypocritical and clear demonstration of manipulation of events and reality, any objection otherwise cannot be justified.

    Throw into the mix, the current Presidential Primaries and we have something that is showing cracks in the pestle.

    What do people really think? While this question, in terms of the Primaries, may focus on the people of one country, it is still important.

    Firstly, the Primaries are showing that the US citizenry is completely fed up with ‘traditional’ politics.

    This is critical. Because it points to mistrust, disbelief and animosity.

    When a citizenry does not trust its leaders, there is a problem.

    Nevertheless, what is the solution. The potential election of a wildcard, maybe even a Manchurian Candidate, is not a pleasing option either.

    What we actually have is a crisis of management, not leadership specifically, but administration.

    A people MUST trust the administration, otherwise there can be no positive development.

    As we look further, the Primaries have also exposed cracks in the society itself, prejudices, ignorance and in some cases, hatred.

    This has become, rather than an event that should not have happened, an event that should cause deep thought and a realignment of direction, to a better path. This thought must be opn the part of the administration, business leaders and community leaders.

    Whereto from here?

    That may seem an unreachable altruistic goal, but what else?

    I contend that further to this, this thought needs to expand beyond the borders of the country of those Primaries, to other nations.

    Where we have leaders fending off the accusations derived from the Panama Papers, why not discussions of the way forward instead?

    This is critical, for honesty. This is also critical if the world is to find a way forward with less conflict and a true path to a New World Order.

    Or was the New World Order all about control and the wealth of a select few, rather than an Order of communication, development, wealth creation for all and better standards of living for all?


  44. David April 6, 2016 at 5:01 AM #

    “There’s always going to be illicit movement of funds but we shouldn’t make it legal.”

    -President Obama

    Generally, agree with him entirely, and as an example, they need to start with changing rules in Vermont and Delaware.

    That said, what is illicit movement of funds?

    Is it the source i.e. illegal activity, that makes it illegal? Surely that needs to be acted on, much so by the relevant Police departments at the source location.

    Is it the transfer to low tax regimes? Note that the source of funds may be entirely legal in that case, although the use of international tax structures may be frowned upon.

    The question, in line with my commentary above, is, what is the point of all of this.

    Let us ask THAT question.

    If that is not answered in a satisfactory manner, then we are just spinning wheels.

The blogmaster invites you to join the discussion.

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