Bush signs more deals
(CNS): The Cayman Islands government has signed a number of supplementary agreements with the Nordic countries at the Norwegian Embassy in Paris today. The Leader of Government Business McKeeva Bush confirmed that the agreements were commercial deals to accompany the main bi-lateral agreements which were signed earlier this year in Copenhagen following negotiations by the PPM administration. Former Minister Alden McLaughlin said he was pleased to see the hard work over the last couple of years had paid off.
Signing on behalf of Norway was Mathias Fredici Kristensen, Norway’s Royal Ambassador extended his appreciation to the Cayman Islands Government. "I would like to congratulate the Cayman Islands on the signing of these agreements with the Nordic countries. These will eliminate double taxation on individuals and on international shipping and air transport, and will establish a mutual agreement procedure in transfer pricing cases,” he said.
McLaughlin told CNS that alongside the UK deal which Bush signed on Monday the PPM adminstraiton had gone a long way with several other agreements including this one.
"The UK agreement was negotiated before I left office and significant progress had been made on four others," he said. "Our hard work over the past couple of years and in particular that of Debbie Drummond and Dr Chris Rose is continuing to pay off," he said.
The signing of this agreement marks the final stage in the process of completing negotiations with the Nordic countries.
Category: Headline News
the only advisors to the government who have access to the oecd are the cheif secretary and the attorney general. and i dont think either of these advisors would do anything to harm the country.
then again perhaps i should rethink my position on the attorney general based on the recent election fiasco!
Does anyone know what experience either of these "advisors" have in negoitiating TIEA’s?
My understanding is that while the government had 4 agreements they were working on, none of these have come to anything in 4 years…. in the meantime we are still on the grey list. so it makes sense to progress other agreements as long as they are similar to what we did before.
Sitting back and complaining about the oecd and doing nothing is what got us into this position in the first place..
The country spent 4 years and signed 1 agreement. the risk of g20 sanctions etc pushed us to sign 7 agreements "as a group" when we did the onewith the nordic countries. had it not been for that, cayman would still be under pressure now. truth is cayman is still under great pressure from a perception and a business point of view, so it has to get off this grey list.
We can talk about why we are signing (current or previous govt, does not matter your politics) all day long but it is a fact that eventually most countries will be entering in these agreements as a result of this new g20/oecd push.
Tim ridley is correct…there are limited benefits that one can achieve with these things. therefore we should sign as long as the model agreement being utilised does not put us at a disadvantage compared to our competitors. Lets face it—we signed an agreement back in 2000 with the US which is the main source of our financial services business. and since then our industry has grown exponentially so clearly these agreements (as long as they maintain the necessary protections to prevent fishing expeditions) cannot be regarded as harmful.
Both governments are correct in trying to sign these agreements as long as they remain in the form they have signed with other countries.
Bad advice – it seems that MAC’s advisors can’t even count.
The issues are multidimensional. Cayman is not dealing with counterparties who all have the same agenda or the same view of offshore financial centres.
The stated policy of the Cayman Government has for many years been to try to secure benefits to Cayman under the various arrangements contemplated. The willingness of the counterparties to grant benefits varies. Some take the view that, since there is no direct taxation in Cayman, it is inappropriate to enter into a Double Tax Treaty with benefits and thus insist on a Tax Information Exchange Agreement with no or very limited benefits. Others take a more expansive view. And some want both a DTA and a TIEA! So each agreement will depend on specific (and sometimes lengthy) negotiation. That is why the skills of the Cayman negotiating team are indeed so critical.
In reality, the benefits that Cayman can secure are usually limited (but nevertheless helpful in the aggregate) to archane areas such as air and shipping, students and pensions, that are relatively cheap giveaways for the other parties. It is (almost) inconceivable that Cayman can secure advantages such as no or reduced withholding taxes on dividends, interest, royalties etc, unless it changes its own domestic regime to tax such receipts here.
The world is changing very fast. Cayman must change too. And our actions must not simply be limited to DTA’s and TIEA’s. Domestic transparency urgently needs a makeover. And we need to revisit our immigration regime to once again get the brightest and the best not only to set up their financial businesses here but also to establish meaningful physical operations here.
he is just completing what Mr. Alden started don’t be too impressed..
According to Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 06/20/2009 – 07:36, he is just completing what Alden started……..so God help us all!
Well,well,well, I never thought that this little rock would be in such a demand and suddenly become a pawn to the OECD,s,, that’s mother country for you. and Mac, they saw you coming and you had better nibble a little before you take that big bite and take us all over the cliff.
God I hope your wrong but suspect your right how long has Mac known this new adviser Mr what’s his name? is this may why Alden was taking longer to sign agreements because it wasn’t beneficial to Cayman.
Double taxation agreements like the ones reported in this story and the one with the UK are much better for Cayman than the sign at any cost agreements being advocated by some.