Welcome to The Chestnut Tree
 
 

  Under The Spreading Chestnut Tree

• Home
• Topics
• Archives
• Newsletters
• Activism
• To Do List
• Search
• Submit
• Contact
• Links
• FAQ
 

  The Giving Tree

• About the Tree
• From Julia
• Writings
•
Quotes
• Music
• Movies
• Visuals
• Junk Shop
• Who's Who
• The Memory Hole
• Thoughts and Ideas
• Recommended Reading
 

  Random Headlines


War/Terrorism
[ War/Terrorism ]

·U.S. Deploys Slide Show to Press Case Against Iran
·"War on Terror" Saves Few Lives: Expert
·TERROR IN TINY TOWN
·U.S. Lowers Number of Troops To Be Added for Iraqi Elections
·A Revealing Look at Iraq’s Constitution
·Bush Gives New Reason for Iraq War
·Civil War Looms in Iraq as Constitution Talks End in Disarray
·Iraqi Activist Taken Up by Bush Recants Her Views
·Shiites Cut Off Talks on Charter
 

 
  Tax Avoidance 'Keeps Developing World Poor'
Posted on Wednesday, September 21 @ 20:21:44 EDT by TheTree
 
 
  Taxes/Budget/Economy Multinational companies operating in the world's poorest countries are "dodging" around £270bn a year in tax, anti-poverty campaigners claimed today.

by Paul Owen
Monday, September 12, 2005
Common Dreams

By not paying the taxes, rich businesses are depriving developing countries of much needed revenue, according to a report by Christian Aid.

Andrew Pendleton, a senior policy advisor for the charity, said the scale of the lost revenue "beggars belief".

The report names no names but says leading accountancy firms, banks and business conglomerates with close links to the UK were implicated.

The study says the businesses are secreting money in offshore banks, trusts and companies, creating tax havens away from Britain.

It argues that the shortfall means the developed world will never achieve its stated aim of reducing world poverty. The report coincides with the UN's review of its Millennium Development Goals (MDG), which is taking place in New York.

It argues that responsible tax regimes must be put in place in order to help achieve the MDG aim of cutting poverty by half by 2015.

"Tax is the forgotten issue in the debate about how to tackle poverty, and must be added to trade, debt and aid if the world is serious about meeting the MDGs," Mr Pendleton said.

"For decades, poor countries such as Kenya and Bolivia have been haemorrhaging money to which they are properly entitled.

"If these leaks could be plugged, it would mean that poor countries would not have to be so reliant on handouts that so often come with damaging strings attached."

Mr Pendleton said the £272bn the multinational corporations and rich individuals avoided each year dwarfed the annual amount of annual overseas aid.

"The sheer scale of the lost tax revenue this implies for governments around the world beggars belief," he said.

"There is a crisis developing in poor countries as public services and infrastructure crumble because of a lack of public money.

"Tax avoidance by wealthy people and multinational companies is one of the main causes of this. Corrupt leaders, criminals and terrorists are hiding away their ill-gotten gains by piggybacking on the systems set up for tax avoidance."

The Christian Aid report is being published in conjunction with the independent group the Tax Justice Network.

 
 
  Related Links

· More about Taxes/Budget/Economy
· News by TheTree


Most read story about Taxes/Budget/Economy:
Death Tax? Double Tax? For Most, It's No Tax

 

  Article Rating

Average Score: 0
Votes: 0

Please take a second and vote for this article:

Excellent
Very Good
Good
Regular
Bad

 

  Options


 Printer Friendly Printer Friendly

 Send to a Friend Send to a Friend

 

 
 
"Login" | Login/Create an Account | 0 comments
The comments are owned by the poster. We aren't responsible for their content.
 
 


 
  Web site powered by PHP-Nuke

All logos and trademarks in this site are property of their respective owner. The comments are property of their posters, all the rest © 2002 by me. For more information on ownership, please see the Fair Use Notice.
You can syndicate our news using the file backend.php or ultramode.txt