Seize ‘bull by horns’ to beat corporate tax push

• Bahamas urged to ‘get on front foot’ via own reforms

• Govt warned: ‘Make choices for the next generation’

• Banker argues taxation threat had never gone away

By NEIL HARTNELL

Tribune Business Editor

nhartnell@tribunemedia.net

The Bahamas must seize “the bull by the horns” and implement progressive tax reforms to place it ahead of the drive for a global minimum corporate tax rate, a top banker urged yesterday.

Gowon Bowe, who headed the private sector’s Coalition for Responsible Taxation when VAT was introduced, told Tribune Business that this nation must “get on the front foot” and initiate its own adjustments rather than be forced on to the defensive by the G-20 nations and Organisation for Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD).

Acknowledging that the introduction of corporate and/or personal income tax must be part of a comprehensive taxation reform, and only undertaken after careful study, he argued that The Bahamas can no longer shirk from overhauling what he described as “a regressive, faulty and inoperable” system in favour of more progressive options.

Criticising successive administrations for taking the safe, easy way out when it came to enacting major reforms, Mr Bowe said they too often showed “fear of political retribution” and ducked “making choices that will carry us through to the next generation”.

Asserting that The Bahamas should have realised that the OECD’s tax-related initiatives had never gone away, with the Bush and Trump administrations offering merely a “temporary reprieve”, the Fidelity Bank (Bahamas) chief said the present US government’s public stance showed it will be “very aggressive and direct” in making its global minimum corporate tax vision a reality.

Noting the continued G-20/OECD belief that their member nations are losing vast tax revenue sums to so-called “zero tax” countries such as The Bahamas and other international financial centres (IFCs), Mr Bowe told this newspaper: “While some may castigate me for it, I’ve long been a proponent of progressive taxation...

“The Bahamas needs to stop reacting to what is taking place globally, and take the bull by the horns and determine what the most appropriate and relevant tax system is for The Bahamas. If we do it properly, I think we can come to an accommodation that is globally acceptable and competitive.”

Urging The Bahamas to get out ahead of the global minimum corporate tax rate push, Mr Bowe said any reforms needed to ensure the government can continue to fund all the state’s functions and essential public services. 

He added that previous legislative changes to meet the European Union’s (EU) demands for an end to preferential tax treatment for the economy’s international sector, and that all companies doing business from The Bahamas must be doing real business and have a physical presence (substance), provide a platform for a broader tax base that eliminates the need for tax rates of 30 percent or higher.

Calling on The Bahamas to introduce corporate income tax on its own before it is forced to do so, Mr Bowe told Tribune Business: “Let’s stop thinking how we appease the overlords of the OECD, and become overlords ourselves by determining what is most appropriate for us and using that in an advantageous manner to become competitive.

“We are right now always on the back foot and playing defence. If we get our tax system right for us, we can get on the front foot and play offence. We can have a tax system that is progressive, consistent with first world countries, competitive and demonstrates that it is not harmful because we are generating revenues that enable us to operate in a fiscally sustainable manner.”

Mr Bowe added that introducing a corporate income tax would enable The Bahamas to enter into double taxation agreements with other nations, whereby foreign companies based here would be taxed only by this nation and not by their home states as well.

“We don’t focus on the root that needs to be addressed,” he argued. “I think our regressive, faulty and inoperable tax system will always come under scrutiny. If we fix this we will be in a better position to promote ourselves as overlords competing in the same sphere with other nations but more aggressively and competitively with our tax system.”

Calling on The Bahamas to adopt a “David versus Goliath” mentality, Mr Bowe said it could “use the same strategy to our advantage in operating in their playing field”. However, he urged the Government and political elite to commit to reform before it is forced upon this nation.

“Don’t let it be lip service,” he warned. “If you’re going to do it, draw on what was done before and get to the point of execution not deliberation. I’m going to say, and will catch some flak for it, but we’ve had successive administrations who, when out of office, say what should have been done when they were in the seat.

“That demonstrates a fear of political retribution for doing the right thing while continuing to leave us in a regressive state. Make choices that carry is through to the next generation and beyond, and don’t make choices that will be detrimental to future generations.”

Mr Bowe spoke out after the newly-elected Biden administration last week threw its support behind the other G-20 nations and OECD, which is leading the push for a minimum global corporate tax rate.

It now appears inevitable - and only a matter of time - before a minimum global corporate income tax rate emerges, with corresponding pressure on all nations to conform, after the US government last week threw its support behind efforts to achieve a consensus on the issue. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) also backed the initiative.

The Biden administration’s move is a marked change from the stance taken by its Trump predecessor, which was more focused on allowing sovereign nations to set their own tax rates and opposed to European efforts to impose a so-called “digital tax” on US multinational giants such as Amazon, Google, Facebook and Apple.

However, the newly-elected Democratic government sees a global minimum corporate tax as critical to preventing such companies from minimising their tax burden via creative structures that shift profits and revenues to low-tax nations such as The Bahamas and other international financial centres (IFCs).

Its view, like that of the OECD and high-tax European nations such as France and Germany, is that a global minimum will prevent a so-called “race to the bottom” on tax rates. Pascal Saint-Amans, head of tax administration at the OECD, told the UK’s Guardian newspaper: “What the US has put on the table … [is saying] we want the rest of the world to follow, we kill tax havens. The game is over. Let’s move to a minimum agreed level.”

Janet Yellen, the US treasury secretary, last week pushed for a minimum global corporate tax rate of 21 percent - something that would represent a giant, potentially unsustainable leap for nations such as The Bahamas, which has no personal or corporate income tax.

Even World Bank executives suggested that 21 percent would be too much. And developing a global consensus on the issue may take time, even though the G-20 and OECD are pushing for one by summer 2021, given the disparities in existing rates. While the US presently enjoys a 21 percent corporate tax rate, the UK is at 19 percent and Ireland at just 12.5 percent, for example.

Comments

bahamianson says...

Global tax rate? Damn , we need trump back . I do not want a global anything.

Posted 14 April 2021, 4:59 p.m. Suggest removal

Proguing says...

"The Biden administration’s move is a marked change from the stance taken by its Trump predecessor, which was more focused on allowing sovereign nations to set their own tax rates"

Exactly, and to think that some Bahamians supported Biden the bully, who wants to decide what taxes the Bahamas should have. This type of interference is a violation of international law and the UN Charter. When will the Bahamas take a stand?

Posted 15 April 2021, 10:06 a.m. Suggest removal

Proguing says...

Nice quote too: “What the US has put on the table … [is saying] we want the rest of the world to follow, we kill tax havens." meaning kill the Bahamas. At least they are honest about it now.

Posted 15 April 2021, 10:43 a.m. Suggest removal

tribanon says...

Mr. Bowe has yet to learn that a world run by globalist bureaucrats seeking to feast on ever increasing tax revenues to grow their unproductive empires will never result in a level playing field for our small country, no matter what we do. I remember Mr. Bowe being very supportive of the introduction of VAT as a necessary means of enabling our government to reduce the level (not the rate of growth) of our unsustainable national debt. That certainly didn't happen. What we got instead for our VAT dollars was an even more bloated government combined with an enormous increase in our national debt. And that remains the case even after a 60% increase in VAT shortly after Minnis became PM.

Obviously Mr. Bowe is not familiar with the addage that grossly over-bloated and unsustainable governments must be starved of tax revenue rather than fed more tax revenue. And that especially applies to our mismanaged and unproductive government that is riddled with waste, fraud and corruption from the very top right on down. Tax reform to achieve a more progressive tax structure without first addressing our much more fundamental underlying problems is a truly meaningless endeavour. It would only serve to dig a deeper financial hole for our nation and the vast majority of 'less well off' Bahamians and struggling small businesses.

Wake up Mr. Bowe. To heal a dying cancer patient a physician knows the deadly cancer must first be killed by starving or poisoning it. The last thing any physician would recommend is feeding the cancer exactly what it wants and needs to grow!

*Repost from yesterday:*

Global tax neutrality is a concept that would only ever be fair to the globalist bureaucrats who are in favour of and seek to have control over the big-government-high-tax jurisdictions of the world. The New World Order being sought by the globalist bureaucrats who love living the good life off of the taxes they impose on others would end up crashing the economies of smaller nations around the world like the Bahamas, leaving their many impoverished people to be only looked on by the new global ruling class as a source of cheap (slave) labour.

Posted 14 April 2021, 5:16 p.m. Suggest removal

tetelestai says...

This is a very disingenuous post, tribanon. You are not fully representing Gowon's full position on either tax or, specifically, VAT.

Posted 15 April 2021, 9:59 a.m. Suggest removal

tribanon says...

You're obviously free to represent what you think is now Mr. Bowe's full position on VAT. Past editions of The Tribune clearly document what his naive views were when he so fervently and gullibly supported VAT being introduced by the last Christie-led PLP administration. There was also much ZNS TV coverage of his naivety and gullibility in giving full throated support for feeding new VAT tax revenues to the very corrupt and wasteful Christie-led PLP administration.

Posted 15 April 2021, 12:42 p.m. Suggest removal

Proguing says...

Yep you got that one right, I remember when VAT was introduced we were told that it would solve all of our problems, starting the debt. They will now tell us the same story with the corporate tax to please Biden.

Posted 15 April 2021, 1:41 p.m. Suggest removal

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