Offshore financial centre
An Offshore Financial Centre or OFC is defined as a country or jurisdiction that provides financial services to nonresidents on a scale that is incommensurate with the size and the financing of its domestic economy. "Offshore" does not refer to the location of the OFC, but to the fact that the largest users of the OFC are nonresident. The IMF lists OFCs as a third class of financial centre, with International Financial Centres, and Regional Financial Centres ; there is overlap.
, the Cayman Islands. The Caribbean, including the Caymans, the British Virgin Islands and Bermuda, has several major Sink OFCs, is the second largest global tax haven, and largest OFC shadow banking centre.
During April–June 2000, the FSF–IMF produced the first list of 42–46 OFCs using a qualitative approach. In April 2007, the IMF produced a revised quantitative-based list of 22 OFCs, and in June 2018, another revised quantitative-based list of eight major OFCs, who are responsible for 85% of OFC financial flows. The removal of currency and capital controls, the early driver for the creation and use of many OFCs in the 1960s and 1970s, saw taxation and/or regulatory regimes become the main reasons for using OFCs from the 1980s. Progress from 2000 onwards from IMF–OECD–FATF initiatives on common standards, regulatory compliance, and banking transparency, has significantly weakened the regulatory attraction of OFCs. Academics now consider the activities of OFCs to be synonymous with tax havens, with a particular focus on corporate tax planning BEPS tools, tax-neutral asset structuring vehicles, and shadow banking/asset securitization.
Research in 2013–14 showed OFCs harboured 8–10% of global wealth in tax-neutral structures, and act as hubs for U.S. multinationals in particular, to avoid corporate taxes via base erosion and profit shifting tools. A study in July 2017, Conduit and Sink OFCs, split the understanding of an OFC into 24 Sink OFCs, and five Conduit OFCs. In June 2018, research showed that OFCs had become the dominant locations for corporate tax avoidance BEPS schemes, costing US$200 billion in lost annual tax revenues. A June 2018 joint-IMF study showed much of the FDI from OFCs, into higher-tax countries, originated from higher-tax countries.
Definitions
Core definition
The definition of an offshore financial centre dates back to academic papers by Dufry & McGiddy, and McCarthy regarding locations that are: Cities, areas or countries which have made a conscious effort to attract offshore banking business, i.e., non-resident foreign currency denominated business, by allowing relatively free entry and by adopting a flexible attitude where taxes, levies and regulation are concerned.” An April 2007 review of the historical definition of an OFC by the IMF, summarised the 1978–2000 academic work regarding the attributes that define an OFC, into the following four main attributes, which still remain relevant:In April 2000, the term rose to prominence when the Financial Stability Forum, concerned about OFCs on global financial stability, produced a report listing 42 OFCs. The FSF used a qualitative approach to defining OFCs, noting that: Offshore financial centres are not easily defined, but they can be characterised as jurisdictions that attract a high level of non-resident activity and volumes of non-resident business substantially exceeds the volume of domestic business.
In June 2000, the IMF accepted the FSF's recommendation to investigate the impact of OFCs on global financial stability. On the 23 June 2000, the IMF published a working paper on OFCs which expanded the FSF list to 46 OFCs, but split into three Groups based on the level of co-operation and adherence to international standards by the OFC. The IMF paper categorised OFCs as a third type of financial centre, and listed them in order of importance: International Financial Centre, Regional Financial Centres and Offshore Financial Centres ; and gave a definition of an OFC:
The June 2000 IMF paper then listed three major attributes of offshore financial centres:
A subsequent April 2007 IMF on OFCs, established a quantitative approach to defining OFCs which the paper stated was captured by the following definition:
The April 2007 IMF paper used a quantitative proxy text for the above definition: More specifically, it can be considered that the ratio of net financial services exports to GDP could be an indicator of the OFC status of a country or jurisdiction. This approach produced a revised list of 22 OFCs, however, the list had a strong correlation with the original list of 46 OFCs from the IMF's June 2000 paper. The revised list was much shorter than the original IMF list as it only focused on OFCs where the national economic accounts produced breakdowns of net financial services exports data.
By September 2007, the definition of an OFC from the most cited academic paper on OFCs, showed a strong correlation with the FSF–IMF definitions of an OFC:
Link to tax havens
The common FSF–IMF–Academic definition of an OFC focused on the outcome of non-resident activity in a location, and not on the reason that non-residents decide to conduct financial activity in a location. However, since the early academic papers into OFCs in the late 1970s, and the FSF-IMF investigations, it has been consistently noted that tax planning is one of the prime drivers of OFC activity. The other most commonly noted prime driver is favorable regulation, or regulatory arbitrage, such as in OFCs like Liberia, that focus on shipping.In April–June 2000, when the FSF–IMF produced lists of OFCs, commentators highlighted the similarity with tax haven lists. Large projects were carried out by the IMF and the OECD from 2000 onwards, on improving data transparency and compliance with international standards and regulations, in jurisdictions that had been labeled OFCs and/or tax havens by the IMF–OECD. The reduction in banking secrecy as a result of these projects, led the leading academics who study tax havens and OFCs, to conclude that by 2010 onwards, the term tax haven and the term OFC had become practically synonymous:
For example, all of the Top 10 tax havens, featured in the various post–2010 tax haven lists, bar the British Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico, appeared in the shorter of 22 OFCs. The British Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico were not included in the IMF 2007 study due to data issues.
Conduit and Sink OFCs
While from 2010 onwards, academics began to treat tax havens and OFCs as practically synonymous, the OECD and the EU went in a different direction. By 2017, the OECD's list of tax havens only contained Trinidad & Tobago, while the EU's 2017 "blacklist" of 17 tax havens, only contained one jurisdiction, Samoa, in the top 20 tax havens, as ranked by academics and non-governmental organisations.In July 2017, the University of Amsterdam's CORPNET group ignored any definition of a tax haven and followed a quantitive approach, analyzing 98 million global corporate connections on the Orbis database. CORPNET used a variation of the technique in the IMF's 2007 OFC working paper, and ranked the jurisdictions by the scale of international corporate connections relative to the connections from the indigenous economy. In addition, CORPNET split the resulting OFCs into jurisdictions that acted like a terminus for corporate connections, and jurisdictions that acted like nodes for corporate connections.
CORPNET's Conduit and Sink OFCs study split the understanding of an offshore financial centre into two classifications:
- 24 Sink OFCs: jurisdictions in which a disproportionate amount of value disappears from the economic system.
- 5 Conduit OFCs: jurisdictions through which a disproportionate amount of value moves toward sink OFCs
CORPNET's lists of top five Conduit OFCs, and top five Sink OFCs, matched 9 of the top 10 havens in the Hines 2010 tax haven list, only differing in the United Kingdom, which only transformed their tax code in 2009–12, from a "worldwide" corporate tax system, to a "territorial" corporate tax system.
All of CORPNET's Conduit OFCs, and 8 of CORPNET's top 10 Sink OFCs, appeared in the of 22 OFCs.
Lists
FSF–IMF 2000 list
The following 46 OFCs are from the June 2007 IMF background paper that used a qualitative approach to identify OFCs; and which also incorporated the April 2000 FSF list which had also used a qualitative approach to identify 42 OFCs.Groups are as per the IMF June 2000 categories:
Dominica, Grenada, Montserrat and Palu were not on the FSF April 2000 list of 42 OFCs but were on the IMF June 2000 list of 46 OFCs.
IMF 2007 list
The following 22 OFCs are from an April 2007 IMF working paper that used a strictly quantitative approach to identifying OFCs.In on both the April 2000 FSF list of 42 OFCs, and the June 2000 IMF list of 46 OFCs.
The IMF list contains all 5 largest Conduit OFCs: Netherlands, United Kingdom, Switzerland, Singapore and Ireland
The IMF list contains 8 of the 10 largest Sink OFCs: missing British Virgin Islands, and Taiwan.
IMF 2018 list
The following 8 OFCs were co-identified by an IMF working paper, as being responsible for 85% of the world's investment in structured vehicles.IMF Major OFC | Conduit Sink OFC Ranking | Global Tax Haven BEPS Ranking | Global Shadow Bank OFI Ranking |
Bermuda† | Top 5 Sink OFC | 9 | n.a. |
British Virgin Islands | Top 5 Sink OFC | 2 | n.a. |
Cayman Islands† | Top 10 Sink OFC | 2 | 1 |
Hong Kong† | Top 5 Sink OFC | 8 | 5 |
Ireland† | Top 5 Conduit OFC | 1 | 3 |
Luxembourg† | Top 5 Sink OFC | 6 | 2 |
Netherlands† | Top 5 Conduit OFC | 5 | 4 |
Singapore† | Top 5 Conduit OFC | 3 | 8 |
In the April 2000 FSF list of 42 OFCs, the June 2000 IMF list of 46 OFCs, and the April 2007 IMF list of 22 OFCs.
The IMF list contains 3 of the largest Conduit OFCs: Netherlands, Singapore and Ireland
The IMF list contains 4 of the 5 largest Sink OFCs: missing Jersey, but includes the Cayman Islands.
FSF 2018 Shadow Bank OFC list
Shadow banking is a key service line for OFCs. The Financial Stability Forum produces a report each year on Global Shadow Banking, or other financial intermediaries. In a similar method to the various IMF lists, the FSF produces a table of the locations with the highest concentration of OFI/shadow banking financial assets, versus domestic GDP, in its 2018 report, thus creating a ranked table of "Shadow Banking OFCs". The fuller table is produced in the section, however, the 4 largest OFCs for shadow banking with OFI assets over 5x GDP are:Countermeasures
Offshore finance became the subject of increased attention since the FSF–IMF reports on OFC in 2000, and also from the April 2009 G20 meeting, during the height of the financial crisis, when heads of state resolved to "take action" against non-cooperative jurisdictions. Initiatives spearheaded by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, the Financial Action Task Force on Money Laundering and the International Monetary Fund have had an effect on curbing some excesses in the offshore financial centre industry, although it would drive the OFC industry towards a for institutional and corporate clients. The World Bank's 2019 World Development Report on the future of work increased government efforts to curb tax avoidance.Tax services
Early research on offshore financial centers, from 1978 to 2000, identified reasons for nonresidents using an OFC, over the financial system in their own home jurisdiction. Prominent reasons in these lists were:The third reason, Manage around currency and capital controls, dissipated with globalisation of financial markets and free-floating exchange rate mechanisms, and ceases to appear in research after 2000. The second reason, Favourable regulations, had also dissipated, but to a lesser degree, as a result of initiatives by the IMF–OECD–FATF post–2000, promoting common standards and regulatory compliance across OFCs and tax havens. For example, while the EU–28 contains some of the largest OFCs, these EU–OFCs cannot offer regulatory environments that differ from other EU–28 jurisdictions.
By 2010, leading tax academics saw little difference between tax havens and OFCs, and treated the terms as synonymous.
In August 2013, Gabriel Zucman showed OFCs housed up to 8–10% of global wealth in tax–neutral structures. Others show that the main reason why private equity funds and hedge funds set up in OFCs, such as the Cayman Islands and Luxembourg, is to facilitate the personal tax planning of the managers. In August 2014, Zucman showed OFCs being used by U.S. multinationals, in particular, to execute base erosion and profit shifting transactions to avoid corporate taxes.
In Q1 2015, Apple executed the largest BEPS transaction in history, moving US$300 billion in intellectual property assets to Ireland, an IMF OFC, to use the Irish "Green Jersey" BEPS tool. In August 2016, the EU Commission levied the largest tax fine in history, at US$13 billion, against Apple in Ireland for abuse of the double Irish BEPS tool from 2004 to 2014. In January 2017, the OECD estimated that BEPS tools, mostly located in OFCs, were responsible for US$100 to 240 billion in annual tax avoidance.
In June 2018, Gabriel Zucman showed that OFC corporate BEPs tools were responsible for over US$200 billion in annual corporate tax losses, and produced the a table of the largest BEPS locations in the world, which showed how synonymous the largest tax havens, the largest Conduit and Sink OFCs, and the largest of OFCs had become.
In June 2018, another joint-IMF study showed that 8 pass-through economies, namely, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, Hong Kong SAR, the British Virgin Islands, Bermuda, the Cayman Islands, Ireland, and Singapore; host more than 85 per cent of the world's investment in special purpose entities, which are often set up for tax reasons.
Zucman Tax Haven | Rank by Profit Shifted | Corporate Profits | Of Which: Local | Of Which: Foreign | Profits Shifted | Effective Tax Rate | Corp. Tax Gain/Loss |
Ireland*†Δ⹋ | 1 | 174 | 58 | 116 | -106 | 4% | 58% |
Caribbean*‡Δ⹋ | 2 | 102 | 4 | 98 | -97 | 2% | 100% |
Singapore*†Δ⹋ | 3 | 120 | 30 | 90 | -70 | 8% | 41% |
Switzerland*†Δ | 4 | 95 | 35 | 60 | -58 | 21% | 20% |
Netherlands*†Δ⹋ | 5 | 195 | 106 | 89 | -57 | 10% | 32% |
Luxembourg*Δ⹋ | 6 | 91 | 40 | 51 | -47 | 3% | 50% |
Puerto Rico | 7 | 53 | 10 | 43 | -42 | 3% | 79% |
Hong Kong*‡Δ⹋ | 8 | 95 | 45 | 50 | -39 | 18% | 33% |
Bermuda*‡Δ⹋ | 9 | 25 | 1 | 25 | -24 | 0% | n.a |
Belgium | 10 | 80 | 48 | 32 | -13 | 19% | 16% |
MaltaΔ | 11 | 14 | 1 | 13 | -12 | 5% | 90% |
All Others | 12 | -51 |
One of the largest 10 tax havens by James R. Hines Jr. in 2010.
Identified as one of the 5 Conduits, by CORPNET in 2017.
Identified as one of the largest 5 Sinks, by CORPNET in 2017.
Identified on the of 22 OFCs.
Identified on the of 8 major OFCs, or pass through economies.
Finance services
Shadow banking
Research into OFCs highlighted shadow banking as an original service of OFCs. Shadow banking enabled the pools of offshore capital, mostly dollars, that had escaped capital controls in the 1960s and 1970s, and thus the main onshore banking systems, to be recycled back into the economic system while paying interest to the capital's owner, thus encouraging them to keep their capital offshore. They highlight the Eurodollar capital market as particularly important. However, as OFCs developed in the 1980s, it became apparent that OFC banks were not just recycling Eurodollars from foreign corporate transactions, but also capital from tax avoidance, and also from other criminal and illegal sources. Many OFCs, such as Switzerland, had banking secrecy laws protecting the identity of the owners of the offshore capital in the OFC. Over the years, a has weakened the ability for OFCs to provide bank secrecy. Shadow banking, however, remains a key part of OFCs services, and the Financial Stability Forum list of major shadow banking locations are all recognized OFCs.Location | Bank Financial Assets | OFI Assets | Insurace & Pension Financial Assets | Public Financial Assets | Central Bank Financial Assets | Total Financial Assets |
Cayman Islands | 34,171 | 211,844 | 1,900 | 21 | 5 | 247,941 |
Luxembourg | 1,414 | 24,675 | 342 | 371 | 26,803 | |
Ireland | 215 | 1,333 | 142 | 31 | 31 | 1,751 |
Netherlands | 319 | 855 | 263 | 42 | 1,480 | |
Hong Kong | 829 | 77 | 134 | 2 | 145 | 1,188 |
United Kingdom | 591 | 309 | 211 | 27 | 1,138 | |
Switzerland | 376 | 283 | 205 | 113 | 977 | |
Singapore | 613 | 99 | 140 | 89 | 942 |
Securitisation
OFCs, however, have expanded into a related area to shadow banking, which is asset securitisation. Unlike traditional shadow banking, where the OFC bank needs to access a pool of offshore capital to operate, securitisation involves no provision of capital. OFC securitisation involves the provision of legal structures, registered in the OFC, into which foreign capital is placed to finance foreign assets, used by foreign operators and foreign investors. The OFC thus behaves more like a legal conduit rather than providing actual banking services. This has seen a rise in large specialist legal and accounting firms, who provide the legal structures for securitisations, in OFC locations. In normal securitisations, the foreign capital, assets and operators can all come from major onshore locations. For example, Deutsche Bank in Germany might lend Euro 5 billion into an Irish Section 110 SPV, which then buys Euro 5 billion in aircraft engines from Boeing, and then leases the engines to Delta Airlines. The reason why Deutsche Bank would use an Irish Section 110 SPV is that it is tax neutral, and that it has certain legal features, particularly orphaning, which are helpful to Deutsche Bank, but which are not available in Germany. Orphaning poses considerable risks of tax abuse and tax avoidance to the tax base of higher-tax jurisdictions; even Ireland discovered a major domestic tax avoidance scheme in 2016, by U.S. distressed debt funds, using the Irish Section 110 SPVs, on Irish domestic investments.Defences
Better regulations
OFCs sometimes market themselves as leaders in regulation operating under the highest standards with the most advanced legal systems. Because OFCs are willing to create legal structures for broad classes of assets, including intellectual property assets, cryptocurrency assets, and carbon credit assets, there is a justification that OFCs are often at the forefront of certain types of regulation. However, in the area of more general regulation, there is little real evidence to support these claims. In addition, there are contrary examples, even from the biggest OFCs, of poor regulation and oversight..Supporters of OFCs also claim that the costs of regulation and operation in OFCs are lower than in the major financial centres due to scale effects and cheaper operating locations. However, there have been no credible studies or evidence put forward, as yet, to demonstrate that it is cheaper to operate from OFCs than major IFCs/RFCs. There is evidence that OFCs have faster approval times, even 24 hours, for approval of new legal structures and special purpose vehicles, however critics highlight this aspect as a sign of weaker regulation and oversight in OFCs.
Securitisation transactions
One of the most important service lines for OFCs is in providing legal structures for global securitisation transactions for all types of asset classes, including aircraft finance, shipping finance, equipment finance, and collateralised loan vehicles. OFCs provide what are called tax neutral special purpose vehicles where no taxes, VAT, levies or duties are taken by the OFC on the SPV. In addition, aggressive legal structuring, including Orphan structures, is facilitated to support requirements for Bankruptcy remoteness, which would not be allowed in larger financial centres, as it could damage the local tax base, but are needed by banks in securitisations. As the effective tax rate in most OFCs is near zero, this is a lower risk, although, the experience of U.S. distressed debt funds abusing Irish Section 110 SPVs in 2012–2016 is notable. However, OFCs play a key role in providing the legal structure for global securitisation transactions that could not be performed from the main financial centres.Promotion of growth
The most controversial claim is that OFCs promote global economic growth by providing a preferred platform, even if due to tax avoidance or regulatory arbitrage reasons, from which global capital is more readily deployed. There are strong academic advocates, and studies, on both sides of this argument. Some of the most cited researchers into tax havens/offshore financial centres, including Hines, Dharmapala and Desai show evidence that, in certain cases, tax havens/OFCs, appear to promote economic growth in neighbouring higher-tax countries, and can solve issues that the higher-tax countries can have in their own tax or regulatory systems, which deter capital investment.The most cited paper specifically on OFCs, also came a similar conclusion :
However, other major tax academics take the opposite view and accuse Hines of mixing cause and effect, and include papers by Slemrod, and Zucman. Critics of this theory also point to studies showing that in many cases, the capital that is invested into the high tax economy via the OFC, actually originated from the high-tax economy, and for example, that the largest source of FDI into the U.K., is from the U.K., but via OFCs.
This claim can get into wider, and also contested, economic debates around the optimised rate of taxation on capital and other free-market theories, as expressed by Hines in 2011.
Structures
Legal structures
The bedrock of most offshore financial centres is the formation of offshore legal structures :- Asset holding vehicles: Many corporate conglomerates employ a large number of holding companies, and often high-risk assets are parked in separate companies to prevent legal risk accruing to the main group. Similarly, it is quite common for fleets of ships to be separately owned by separate offshore companies to try to circumvent laws relating to group liability under certain environmental legislation.
- Asset protection: Wealthy individuals who live in politically unstable countries utilise offshore companies to hold family wealth to avoid potential expropriation or exchange control restrictions in the country in which they live. These structures work best when the wealth is foreign-earned, or has been expatriated over a significant period of time.
- Avoidance of forced heirship provisions: Many countries from France to Saudi Arabia continue to employ forced heirship provisions in their succession law, limiting the testator's freedom to distribute assets upon death. By placing assets into an offshore company, and then having probate for the shares in the offshore determined by the laws of the offshore jurisdiction, the testator can sometimes avoid such strictures.
- Collective Investment Vehicles: Mutual funds, Hedge funds, unit trusts and SICAVs are formed offshore to facilitate international distribution. By being domiciled in a low tax jurisdiction investors only have to consider the tax implications of their own domicile or residency.
- Derivatives and securities trading: Wealthy individuals often form offshore vehicles to engage in risky investments, such as derivatives and global securities trading, which may be extremely difficult to engage in directly onshore due to cumbersome financial markets regulation.
- Exchange control trading vehicles: In countries where there is either exchange control or is perceived to be increased political risk with the repatriation of funds, major exporters often form trading vehicles in offshore companies so that the sales from exports can be "parked" in the offshore vehicle until needed for further investment. Trading vehicles of this nature have been criticised in a number of shareholder lawsuits which allege that by manipulating the ownership of the trading vehicle, majority shareholders can illegally avoid paying minority shareholders their fair share of trading profits.
- Joint venture vehicles: Offshore jurisdictions are frequently used to set up joint venture companies, either as a compromise neutral jurisdiction and/or because the jurisdiction where the joint venture has its commercial centre has insufficiently sophisticated corporate and commercial laws.
- Stock market listing vehicles: Successful companies who are unable to obtain a stock market listing because of the underdevelopment of the corporate law in their home country often transfer shares into an offshore vehicle, and list the offshore vehicle. Offshore vehicles are listed on the NASDAQ, Alternative Investment Market, the Hong Kong Stock Exchange and the Singapore Stock Exchange.
- Trade finance vehicles: Large corporate groups often form offshore companies, sometimes under an orphan structure to enable them to obtain financing and to treat the financing as "off-balance-sheet" under applicable accounting procedures. In relation to bond issues, offshore special purpose vehicles are often used in relation to asset-backed securities transactions.
- Creditor avoidance: Highly indebted persons may seek to escape the effect of bankruptcy by transferring cash and assets into an anonymous offshore company.
- Market manipulation: The Enron and Parmalat scandals demonstrated how companies could form offshore vehicles to manipulate financial results.
- Tax evasion: Although numbers are difficult to ascertain, it is widely believed that individuals in wealthy nations unlawfully evade tax through not declaring gains made by offshore vehicles that they own. Multinationals including GlaxoSmithKline and Sony have been accused of transferring profits from the higher-tax jurisdictions in which they are made to zero-tax offshore centres.
Ship and aircraft registrations
For example, in 2003, state carrier Pakistan International Airlines re-registered its entire fleet in the Cayman Islands as part of the financing of its purchase of eight new Boeing 777s; the U.S. bank refused to allow the aircraft to remain registered in Pakistan, and the airline refused to have the aircraft registered in the United States.
Insurance
A number of offshore jurisdictions promote the incorporation of captive insurance companies within the jurisdiction to allow the sponsor to manage risk. In more sophisticated offshore insurance markets, onshore insurance companies can also establish an offshore subsidiary in the jurisdiction to reinsure certain risks underwritten by the onshore parent, and thereby reduce overall reserve and capital requirements. Onshore reinsurance companies may also incorporate an offshore subsidiary to reinsure catastrophic risks.Bermuda's insurance and re-insurance market is now the third largest in the world. There are also signs the primary insurance market is becoming increasingly focused upon Bermuda; in September 2006 Hiscox PLC, the FTSE 250 insurance company announced that it planned to relocate to Bermuda citing tax and regulatory advantages.
Collective investment vehicles
Many offshore jurisdictions specialise in the formation of collective investment schemes, or mutual funds. The market leader is the Cayman Islands, estimated to house about 75% of world's hedge funds and nearly half the industry's estimated $1.1 trillion of assets under management, followed by Bermuda, although a market shift has meant that a number of hedge funds are now formed in the British Virgin Islands.But the greater appeal of offshore jurisdictions to form mutual funds is usually in the regulatory considerations. Offshore jurisdictions tend to impose few if any restrictions on what investment strategy the mutual funds may pursue and no limitations on the amount of leverage which mutual funds can employ in their investment strategy. Many offshore jurisdictions allow promoters to incorporate segregated portfolio companies for use as mutual funds; the unavailability of a similar corporate vehicle onshore has also helped fuel the growth of offshore incorporated funds.