A tax haven is a state, country or territory where certain taxes are levied at a low rate or not at all. Individuals or corporate entities can find it attractive to establish shell subsidiaries or move themselves to areas with reduced or nil taxation levels relative to typical international taxation. This creates a situation of tax competition among governments. Different jurisdictions tend to be havens for different types of taxes, and for different categories of people or companies.
A tax haven is a state, country or
territory where certain taxes are levied at a low rate or not at all. Individuals
or corporate entities can find it attractive to establish shell subsidiaries or
move themselves to areas with reduced or nil taxation levels relative to
typical international taxation. This creates a situation of tax competition
among governments. Different jurisdictions tend to be havens for different
types of taxes, and for different categories of people or companies.
Classification
Corporations, in order to achieve effective
tax avoidance, use multiple types of tax havens.
1. Primary tax havens: the
location where financial capital winds up. Subsidiary shell companies there
have obtained rights to collect profits from corporate intellectual property
(IP) by transfers from their parent.
2. Semi-tax havens: locations that
produce goods for sale primarily outside of their territorial boundaries and
have flexible regulations to encourage job growth, such as free trade zones,
territorial-only taxation, and similar inducements.
3. Conduit tax havens: locations
where income from sales, primarily made outside their boundaries, is collected,
and then distributed. Semi-tax havens are reimbursed for actual product costs,
perhaps with a commodity markup. The remaining profits are transferred to the
primary tax haven, because it holds rights to profits due to the corporate IP.
By matching outflow to income they do not retain capital and their role, while
crucial, remains invisible.
Large multinational corporations may have
dozen of such tax haven entities interacting with each other. Each haven can
claim that it does not satisfy definitions that attempt to place all tax havens
into a single class. Even increased transparency does not change the
effectiveness of corporate tax avoidance.