RE: Merely using a tax haven isn't a crime-Ace Ankomah
By: Prof Lungu
"...In another transaction
identified by ActionAid as a tax dodge, Accra Brewery
borrowed £8.5m...in 2009-10. The loan was more than
seven times Accra Brewery's total
capitalisation...(The)..interest costs on this loan
charged to Ghana will wipe out £76,000 of Accra
Brewery's tax liability each year.... SABMiller has
numerous subsidiaries offshore, including 11 in
Mauritius, eight in the British Virgin Islands, six in
Switzerland...six in British crown dependencies..." (The
Guardian) .
It is a mighty long way from
Panama, Central America, to Accra, Ghana! In fact,
according to our ace internet-information robot, Panama,
where the HQ of the Mossack Fonseca law firm sits, is
precisely 8,725 miles from Accra, as the crow flies. As
such, from Accra, we'd have hoped that our Mr. Ace
Ankomah would not have trivialized, in a rather petty
fashion, the "Panama Papers" Tax Haven, cum
money-laundering, cum tax-evasion, scandal.
In
fact, it is painfully apparent to us that our Mr. Ace
Ankomah is "merely" looking at the Mossack Fonseca
Tax-Dodge facility for rich and powerful politicians
from Africa (and Ghana where it truly matters to us),
from the perspective of a solitary but pompous
individual with too much into theory. That is the world
of the private company desiring to preserve, and add to
their "shares", resources that actually did not belong
to them in the first place.
Ace Ankomah totally
neglects the important detail in the record that shows
Mr. Kuffour and his family did not have that account
until he became the President of Ghana, that, staffers
in an office of Mossack Fonseca warned supervisors about
multiple instances of corruption related to the Kuffours
and their accounts. In fact, of the records thus far
published, none is so disgracefully read.
Significantly, our pompous Ace Ankomah totally neglects
aspects of public policy that are inter-twined, that
ought to be of concern to taxpayers, as citizens,
including those who happen to be lawyers, accountants,
politicians, and prosecutors. And so, we will admit that
from our lowly vantage position, unlike Ace Ankomah,
we've not seen citizens anywhere:
"...the whole
world...jumping up and down like... (they)... have ants
in...(their)...pants because some people choose to keep
monies and incorporate companies in tax havens...".
Maybe Mr. Ankomah is too mired in his old "grad
school" days when he found the "sexy" in "Tax law",
notwithstanding the counsel he received from professors
practicing with century old textbooks that Tax Law in
college was actually "supposed to be boring".
So, maybe, just maybe, Mr. Ankomah has been counting too
many "beans" that are not his. Or, they may be beans not
earned the old-fashioned way, as in, "legally" and
totally free of "Dodgy-Dave International Crow-Flying
Business Acrobatics", (ICFBA).
Fact is, today, we
all live in a global, inter-dependent, information age.
Today, business is still king and agile, multi-billion
dollar companies are controlling titans. Most of the
titans seek the cheapest rents so they can pay the
lowest. That affords them the ability to award
themselves and their corporate chief executives and
financial officers multi-million dollar annual incomes
and golden parachutes. Increasingly, with sophisticated
marketing strategies and public relations budgets and
annual sales several orders bigger than the annual
incomes of many African countries combined, the "Panama
Papers" and the tax havens they speak of constitute
another cruel grievous betrayal of Africans by their
politicians, after colonialism and neo-colonialism.
There is a lot more to any value than "merely" the
"legal", Mr. Ace Ankomah!
Today, there are at
least seven (7) things we knew before, and know even
now, that must have escaped Ace Ankomah since the leak
of the Panama Papers.
Today, we know that:
1. The Guardian, (2010) reported back in
2010 that ActionAid identified SABMiller, owner of Accra
Brewery, as a tax dodger that uses the business strategy
called "thin capitalization:
"...In another
transaction identified by ActionAid as a tax dodge,
Accra Brewery borrowed £8.5m from the same Mauritius
company in 2009-10. The loan was more than seven times
Accra Brewery's total capitalisation. ActionAid's tax
expert estimates that the interest costs on this loan
charged to Ghana will wipe out £76,000 of Accra
Brewery's tax liability each year.... SABMiller has
numerous subsidiaries offshore, including 11 in
Mauritius, eight in the British Virgin Islands, six in
Switzerland and six in British crown dependencies..."
(Felicity Lawrence, The Guardian) .
2. It is
politicians such as Mr. Agyekum Kuffour who make laws.
It is they who create tax loop-holes that allow people
like Mr. Ankomah to simply grab using self-serving
Dodgy-Dave ICFBAs.
3. We know now that at least
in the case of Ghana, former president Mr. Kuffour his
son (also an accountant), and his wife, have all been
implicated in the "Panama Tax Haven" expose
4. We
know that the Prime Minister of Iceland, Mr. Sigmundur
David Gunnlaugsson, before charges have even been filed,
has resigned amid the controversy over his offshore tax
haven holdings
5. We know that "....Officials in
France, Germany, Austria and South Korea....were
beginning investigations into possible malfeasance, from
money laundering to tax evasion. France’s finance
minister, Michel Sapin, told Parliament the government
was putting Panama back on a Blacklist of havens for tax
evaders..." . (As we are writing this article the
offices of Mossack Fonseca is being raided by Panamanian
officials,
6. We know that based in part on the
disclosure of the Panama Papers, the United States
treasury has now tightened the approval limits for
inversions. "Inversion" is the practice whereby American
companies acquire companies from other countries where
taxes are lower, "merely" to relocate their Headquarters
to those countries on paper. This, just so they can pay
a lot less taxes, or nil, even as those companies profit
from the infrastructure and protections afforded by the
Government and People of the United States - to those
same companies, their employees, their families, and the
communities in which they live. As a result, US
drugmaker Pfizer just walked away from its $160 billion
merger the petit Ireland-based Allergan Plc. But for the
change in the law, the US would have lost an estimated
$1 billion annually from taxes not collected from a
company still essentially an American company.
7.
We know that in Britain as well, Prime Minister David
"Dodgy" Cameron is facing strident calls his resignation
and a government inquiry into the matter. Dodgy Dave is
being accused of bald-faced hypocrisy by championing
financial transparency while benefiting from his family
offshore tax haven accounts at the same time. (Our
prediction is this: In a more literate and serious
county like the UK, Mr. Cameron would be a wounded PM
who, like Mr. Gunnlaugsson of Iceland, would also resign
before we can all learn to wail:
Dodgy Dave is
losing the battle over Panama, Mr, Ace Ankomah!
Dodgy Dave is losing the battle over Panama, Mr, Ace
Ankomah!
So, the way we see it, what Mr. Ankomah
wrote is "merely" a theoretical exercise.
Ankomah talked a lot about the many courses in tax law
he took, many years ago. Unfortunately, he does not seem
to recognize, directly or indirectly, that tax laws do
not come from "Haven". Rather, they are in reality
written and enacted by politicians like Mr. Kuffour. As
a result, there is actually nothing serious or
"applied", in the critical sense, looking at Mr.
Ankomah's boastful homage to tax havens.
In
fact, if Mr. Ankomah, the African, was a tad serious,
rather than "jump like ants were in his pants" when he
read about Mossack Fonseca, he would have instead
hollered to the open African skies:
1. Oh gosh,
Mossack Fonseca customers from Africa have already paid
taxes on the money they've sent to the tax havens
2. Oh gosh, Mossack Fonseca customers from Africa
are merely shifting their tax obligations to a lower tax
administration area within the same political boundary,
within the same country
3. Oh gosh, the Mossack
Fonseca tax havens pay higher interest than they can get
in their own countries!
4. Oh gosh, there are
absolutely no ethical boundaries that when crossed,
permit a sacking of politicians involved with a Mossack
Fonseca tax haven by citizens who pay the salaries of
politicians by the "mere", simple, act of that
ownership.
But Mr. Ace Ankomah makes none of
these claims.
Instead, Ankomah merely reminisces
about 25-year old lectures that were in reality probably
more than half-century old at the time he heard them
because the people who originally wrote those papers had
been mostly dead the previous half-century, and
counting.
Talking about confused minds!
But, this is still the global, information,
inter-connected, business age!
It is politicians
who still decide what tax laws they will write and
enact!
It is top-echelon state tax law
administrators who still decide what tax cheats they
will go after!
And, there are numerous cases
where politicians have not changed or passed laws
because the status quo benefits them, and their fat
pockets.
So yes, Ace Ankomah, even if we were to
throw away all unethical prohibitions that cry "sacking"
and "resignation" of public officials and bureaucrats
for engaging in Dodgy-Dave ICFBAs:
"...the mere
use of tax havens (CAN) be a crime or evidence of
corruption...".
In fact, in addition, those same
factors could then be evidence of civil offenses where,
for example, the "managers" come way ahead with billions
of dollars in their pockets, while shareholders are left
holding empty bags.
So tell us now, Mr. Ace
Ankomah!
Shouldn't we be a lot more critical and
reflective?
Can't we try to be more balanced in
our reflections, "grad" school graduate, or not?
Can't we try to discern the larger public policy
implications for the things we see, say, hear, and do?
Is it not those things that also ought to matter
more to Africans and the hyper-poor communities in this
age, inside and outside Accra?
In closing, we
will urge our Mr. Ace Ankomah, the Philip Baidoos, and
others of similar mind, to take a minute to watch that
30-second video2 about that 10-year old American lad
talking about the law, lawyers, taxes, and yes, prisons!
Get the dockets and the readings glasses with
all those imported gold rims, partners!
So it
goes Ghana!
NOTES & SOURCES: 1. Dodgy-Dave
International Crow-Flying Business Acrobatics (ICFBA,
pronounced, 'Ikf-ba', ©Prof Lungu(2016).
2. Ace
Ankomah. Merely using a tax haven isn't a crime- Ace
Ankomah,
(http://www.ghanaweb.com/GhanaHomePage/features/Merely-using-a-tax-haven-isn-t-a-crime-Ace-Ankomah-429481/).
3. Caroline Humer and Ankur Banerjee. Pfizer,
Allergan Scrap $160 Billion Deal After U.S. Tax Rule
Change,
(http://www.reuters.com/article/us-allergan-m-a-pfizer-idUSKCN0X3188/).
4. Felicity Lawrence. 2010. Brewer accused of
depriving poor countries of millions in revenue. The
Guardian,
(http://www.theguardian.com/business/2010/nov/29/sabmiller-india-africa-actionaid-report/)
5. Philip Lewis (Mic). 10-Year-Old Explains
Wealth Inequality in the Justice System Better Than You
Ever Could,
(https://www.yahoo.com/news/10-old-explains-wealth-inequality-190400061.html/).
www.GhanaHero.com. Visit for more information.
(Read Mo'! Listen Mo'! See Mo'! Reflect Mo'!). Subj:
RE: Merely Using a Tax Haven Isn't a Crime-Ace Ankomah
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