- International Business Companies Act
The International Business Companies Act, 1984 [Chapter 291 of the Revised Laws of the Virgin Islands, 1991] was a
statute of theBritish Virgin Islands which permitted the incorporation of International Business Companies (IBCs) within the Territory. The Act played in a huge role in the economic and financial development of the Territory in the 1990s.The original Act was copied widely by other
offshore financial centre s. [The International Business Companies Acts ofAnguilla [http://www.anguillafsc.com/newlegis/pdf/IntBusCosAct.pdf] ,The Bahamas [http://www.bfsb-bahamas.com/legislation/IBC_Act.pdf] andBelize [http://www.offshorebelize.com/docs/Belize_IBC_Revised_ACT_2000.pdf] are almost word-for-word copies of the British Virgin Islands model. St Vincent and the Grenadines also enacted legislation which is strikingly similar. [http://www.stvincentoffshore.com/pdf/international%20business%20companies%20act.pdf] ]Enactment
The Act was drafted principally by five people: Lewis Hunte, the then
Attorney General of the British Virgin Islands; Neville Westwood,Michael Riegels and Richard Peters, who were partners at the law firm, Harneys; and Paul Butler, a partner from the U.S. law firm ofShearman & Sterling . The Act was subsequently amended several times, but most significantly in 1990.The Act was passed in a partial response to the cancellation by the U.S. government of a
double taxation relief treaty between the British Virgin Islands and the United States. The British Virgin Islands was not alone in this regard; this was part of a policy of mass-repeal by the United States of double tax relief treaties with "microstate s".Despite the British Virgin Islands being an English
common law jurisdiction, the Act drew heavily upon elements ofDelaware corporate law. This reflected the market for British Virgin Islands companies prior to the repeal of the double-tax treaty. The essence of the Act was that a company incorporated under that legislation was prohibited from conducting business with people resident within the Territory (ie. it was for International Business), and in exchange the company was exempt from all forms of British Virgin Islandstaxation andstamp duty .Parts of the Act were quite radical for the time. The Act abolished the concept of "
ultra vires " for companies, [This was nearly two years before it would subsequently be abolished in theUnited Kingdom under theCompanies Act 1985 .] considerably restricted the requirement forcorporate benefit , it permitted companies to change their corporatedomicile from one jurisdiction to another, it allowed "truemerger " of two different corporate entities, and introduced the concept ofvoting trust s to the jurisdiction.The Act was passed into law by the Territory's
legislature on 15 August 1984.Growth
Initially, market response to the legislation was slow, but by 1998 a steady core of incorporation work was evident. However, in
1990 the U.S. invadedPanama and arrested GeneralManuel Noriega . At the time, Panama had been one of the market leaders in the provision of offshore companies. However, the invasion badly shook investor confidence in Panama, and incorporations in the British Virgin Islands under the Act soared from 1991 onwards.From 1991 the Act was remarkably successful generating large numbers of incorporations. The Companies Registry in the Territory had to be expanded twice to cope with the volume of incorporations. The Act was then copied widely by other Caribbean offshore financial centres.
Despite its American focus, the key market for IBCs incorporated within the Territory developed in
Hong Kong . Use of British Virgin Islands IBCs became so ubiquitous in Hong Kong, that in commercial jargon offshore companies generally were generically referred to there as "BVIs". ["Decades ago, two wealthy Hong Kong entrepreneurs opted to use a British Virgin Islands (BVI) entity for a business venture, with much success: word got around and Hong Kong businessmen followed in their droves." [http://www.legalweek.com/Articles/1015915/Offshore+Welcome+to+the+goldrush.html] ]In 2000,
KPMG were commissioned by the British Government to produce a report on the offshore financial industry generally, and the report indicated that nearly 41% of the offshore companies in the world were formed in the British Virgin Islands, making the British Virgin Islands one of the world's leading offshore financial centres. As a direct result the Territory has one of the highest incomes per capita in the Caribbean. [According to the CIA World factbook, in 2004 the Territory had the 12th highest GDP per capita in the world. [https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/rankorder/2004rank.html] ]
Source: British Virgin Islands Financial Services CommissionRepeal
In 1999, a series of international initiatives were commenced against
tax haven s by supra-national bodies such as theOECD , including an initiative against what was termed "unfair tax competition ". One of the concerns of the OECD was that jurisdictions such as the British Virgin Islands had a "ring fence d" tax regime, whereby companies could be incorporated under the International Business Companies Act which could not actually trade in the Territory, but would also be exempt from most British Virgin Islands taxes. After a series of discussions, the British Virgin Islands government agreed to repeal the ring-fencing provisions in its tax legislation. [It was pointed out during the discussions that the ring-fencing did not actually change British Virgin Islands tax law at all. Under previous law, if a BVI company did not trade within the Territory and did not remit earnings to the Territory, no tax was assessed against it. The International Business Companies Act just crystallised this arrangement. The OECD did not find this argument persuasive.]Because of the sheer volume of companies involved, the transition to a new legislative framework was accomplished over a two year transition period. To protect the offshore business, the British Virgin Islands abolished both
income tax andstamp duty on all transactions except those relating to land in the Territory. Then the government enacted theBVI Business Companies Act (No 16 of 2004). The slightly cumbersome name was designed to slightly reflect the name of the earlier statute and cash-in on the "IBC brand" which had grown under the former legislation. From 1 January 2005 to 31 December 2005 the two Acts ran in parallel, and it was possible to incorporate a company under either form of legislation. from 1 January 2006 until 31 December 2006, one could no longer incorporate a company under the International Business Companies Act, and all new incorporations had to be conducted under the BVI Business Companies Act. During 2006 detailed transitional provisions were enacted to allow companies formed under the old legislation to adapt to the new legislation without having to significantly amend theirconstitutional documents .The International Business Companies Act was then finally repealed in full on 31 December 2006. [Although the Act has formally been repealed, certain parts of the Act remain indirectly in force under the BVI Business Companies Act, 2004 - particularly in relation to de-registration of
security interest s registered under the Act.]A special arrangement between the BVI government and one of the key trust companies in the Territory meant that the last company incorporated under the Act was named "The Last IBC Limited". It was company number 690583.
External references
* [http://www.bbp-net.com/down/law/bvi_ibc.pdf Text of the International Business Companies Act]
Footnotes
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