Juni 21, 2007

Internationale Steuerhinterziehung & Informationsaustausch zwischen Staaten (en)

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The international tax evasion exists when a player, natural person or legal entity is voluntarily outside of the law which it is normally subject in its own state. This consists mainly to research a state or special economic zone with a favourable tax regime or even non-existent in some cases to conduct financial transactions in order often very lucrative. It may thus be tax avoidance if the player skilfully deflects the laws and characterized tax evasion when the player is perfectly well aware of the risks incurred in the light of international and national legislation in force.

These preferred spaces commonly named offshore places question only when they put in unfair manner in competition with non-privileged tax regime states, so that initially they appeared to energize economically disadvantaged areas or with a high unemployment rate difficult to bring down. Today, these areas have been somewhat diverted from their original purpose to the ends purely speculative and money laundering, particularly for non-commercial operations within the banking sector.

The general problem of this thesis is based on the importance of the exchange of information between states. This means, as single instrument, does it allow effectively fight offshore tax evasion?

In order to answer to this question in the context of this thesis, we will consider as the main themes to highlight a topic poorly developed in university research, this area is traditionally the purview of experts or practitioners in governmental or non-governmental, national and international.

Among the research topics can be developed, it seems useful to review the following topics: offshore financial centres or offshore places, the various national and international tax information processing; diversity in the policy of bank secrecy; cross-border cooperation; resources employed in the search for offences; tax information, the consistency and continuity in dealing with financial crime among existing organizations; amplification of the severity of fraud phenomenon internationally; the legality of reservations on essential topics of the international tax agreements; internationalization of tax avoidance, tax competition between the various state systems, the difficult implementation of legislation to different rules of law in tax matters and the existence of more exceptions accentuating this phenomenon.

The efficiency of existing texts relating to the exchange of tax information in order to fight offshore tax evasion is a central issue. In this case, it seems interesting to note that the global phenomenon of tax evasion is permitted by the tax opacity of some states, the fiscal sovereignty can't bear harm by international law, unless restrictively to a community level or regional level. From then on a conflict of existing legal norms among different national rights on the one hand and international law on the other hand can be observed.

The absence of international convention with binding force on the one hand and the variety of national courts reviewing case by case issues dealing with the intelligence exchange on the other hand, seem to lead to legal uncertainty so that an international convention unanimously consented would be required in the determination of a legal status devoid of ambiguity in the tax information exchange.

Some elements – such bank transparency; dialogue among states at the community and international summits; fight against organized networks : terrorism, prostitution, weapons, narcotics; cooperation between the various intelligence services – make possible to better define the status issue in the framework of international organizations that can unite the states in this regard. However, there is a contradiction between vital interests of states that questions the cooperation which should be seamless for actively and effectively fighting against any form of tax delinquency, communication is essential here.

Thus, thorough examination of all these issues can determine the effectiveness of the arrangements with regard to information exchange between states in the tax field.

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