- Tax Justice Network
The Tax Justice Network (TJN) is a coalition of researchers and activists with a shared concern about what they argue are the harmful impacts of
tax avoidance ,tax competition andtax haven s, which "corrupt national tax regimes and onshore regulation, and distort markets by rewarding economic free-riders and mis-directing investment." The use of "justice" in the name illustrates its philosophies towardstaxation , including a belief that taxes can be a tool forsocial justice .Philosophy
Key ideals promoted by the TJN include tax co-operation, level playing fields, democratic taxation and transparency.
Progressive taxation
According to the group, progressive taxation requires that:
#
Income tax es should have progressive rates (ie. increase with higher rates of pay);
#Value Added Tax es (or VAT) should operate with exemptions to protect the least well off in any society;
#Social security contributions should not be capped;
#Capital gains tax es should be part of all tax regimes, and should not offer significant tax incentives when compared to income taxes (ie. no avoidance by restructuring affairs to characterise income as capital gains);
# Wealth orinheritance tax es should be in operation;
#Tariff s and trade taxes should used when needed to protect fledgling industry, natural resource exploitation [The group does not seem to explain how natural resource exploitation is linked to Tax Justice] or when they are cost effective alternatives to charges on the poorest members of a society.The group's support for progressive taxation means that it is opposed to
regressive tax ation. Regressive taxation they characterise as including:#
Flat tax es;
# Income taxes with capped liabilities;
# VAT without exemptions;
#National insurance regimes that cap contributions;
# Low rate capital gains tax regimes;
# the absence of wealth related taxation;
# Substantial allowances and reliefs available only to the well-off meaning that they pay lower than average real rates of taxation;
# Benefit systems that create high effective marginal rates of taxation.Transparency
In relation to transparency, the TJN's philosophy supports:
# Relevant company details being made publicly available for inspection, wherever the company is incorporated in the world. This would include details of its constitution, ownership, management and accounts. This requirement would extend to all other entities created by law including
charities , foundations, trusts,partnership s with limited liability as well as material entities run by individuals and partnerships without limited liability;
# Banning the use of all nominee arrangements whether for ownership or management;
# Wide disclosure by groups of companies of accounting information;
# All tax accounting to be made available to tax authorities;
# All tax disclosure to be consistent and to be made on the basis that (in the group's words) all "cards are face up on the table".The TJN is fundamentally opposed to:
#
Tax haven s;
# Unpublished accounts, constitutions, membership information and management details for all entities created bystatute ;
# The use of nominees;
#Banking secrecy when used to prevent tax disclosure;
# Trusts when used to create tax advantages or to recreate the effects of banking secrecy laws;
# Inconsistent or incomplete tax disclosure;
# Non-disclosure of tax accounting by legal entities;
# The use of consolidated group accounts to hide offshore and other transactions of which the group may not wish its shareholders and others to be aware.Organisation
According to its website, the organisation is committed to:
* Is committed to supporting the launch of a Tax Justice Network forAfrica in 2007
* Organising an annual workshop bringing together researchers, campaigners and policy makersAccording to its website, the TJN is directed by an International Steering Committee elected from their global membership. They claim to have legal, economic and tax specialists to advise on policy issues, and an expert group to assist with publication of briefing papers.
The group has an International Secretariat based at the New Economics Foundation in London. It is constituted as a not for profit association. The managing body is Council of Members and Supporters which meets annually.
Membership
The network's members are said to include:
* development organisations and
NGO s;
* faith groups;
*trade union s;
* academics;
* journalists;
* economists;
* financial professionals, and
* public-interest groups.Founding objectives
The founding objectives of the network are:
* to raise the level of awareness about the 'secretive' world of offshore finance;
* to promote links between interested parties around the world, particularly involving developing countries;
* to stimulate and organise research and debate;
* to encourage and support national and international campaign activity.The cornerstone of the organisation's objectives is the belief that
tax haven s cause poverty.Campaigns and campaign objectives
The campaign objectives of the organization are explained in part 2 of the Declaration [http://www.taxjustice.net/cms/front_content.php?idcat=3&lang=1&client=1 "A Manifesto for Tax Justice"] , and some broad policy proposals are outlined in the annex to the Manifesto.
The TJN campaigns to identify and remedy the deficiencies of national and international tax policy frameworks and to support the activities of existing campaigns in different countries by connecting them to a worldwide movement.
In particular they aim to:
* promote more local campaigns for 'tax justice', especially in developing countries; and
* provide a medium through which such issues can be promoted within multilateral agencies such as theUnited Nations , theWorld Bank , the International Monetary Fund (IMF) , the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) and theEuropean Union .The TJN assets that the purpose of trying to operate at this level is to counteract the activities of legal, business and accounting
lobbying organisations which they claim devote considerable time and money to securing favourable tax treatment on behalf of wealthy individuals and powerfulcorporation s.Publications
The network offers a free publication called [http://www.taxjustice.net/cms/front_content.php?idcat=30&lang=1&client=1 "Tax us if you can"] , which offers a guide to the language of international tax policy and shows how professionals profit from 'abusive tax practices'. It also outlines the numerous policy failures that have encouraged the creation of the 'shadow economy' of tax havens and proposes a range of practical solutions to this global crisis.
In March 2005 the network published a briefing paper called [http://www.taxjustice.net/cms/upload/pdf/Price_of_Offshore.pdf "The Price of Offshore"] which estimated that the amount of funds held by individuals in offshore tax havens, is about 11.5 trillion US dollars. Using this estimate they calculated the worldwide tax revenue lost on the income from these assets at 255 billion US dollars annually. This amount, if correct, would more than plug the financing gap to achieve the
United Nation 's [http://www.unmillenniumproject.org/ Millennium Development Goal] of halving world poverty by 2015 assuming that it could be collected by national governments and was then diverted to that purpose.In June 2000,
Oxfam published a report called [http://www.oxfam.org.uk/what_we_do/issues/debt_aid/tax_havens.htm "Releasing the Hidden Billions for Poverty Eradication"] , which drew attention to the supposed harmful impacts of tax havens on developing countries and proposed to identify why such impacts are felt more forcefully there.Footnotes
External links
* [http://www.taxjustice.net/ Tax Justice Network website]
* [http://www.taxjustice.net/cms/upload/pdf/Price_of_Offshore.pdf "The Price of Offshore"] , briefing paper of the network
* [http://www.taxjustice.net/cms/front_content.php?idcat=30&lang=1&client=1 "Tax us if you can"] , free publication of the network
* [http://www.taxresearch.org.uk/blog/ Tax blog of Tax Justice Network's research adviser]
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