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03 February 2009
Orwell, You Were Wrong - But Only By 25 Years

Scene: A House In Coronation Street, Manchester

Time: 4th February, 2012

George Thomas is playing football with his son Edward on their Nintendo Wii.6, which they had bought on a visit to Bratislava the previous week to see Manchester United play Bayern Munich. There is a loud hammering at the door. Outside, three very scary-looking heavies in Stasi-style uniforms are pointing Kalashnikovs.

'On your knees,' yells the leader, in a Hollywood Soviet accent, 'Hands on your heads.'

His name turns out to be Dmitri, and after Edward was allowed to pop to the Rover's Return to borrow a bottle of vodka, he explains that they have come to collect VAT on the Nintendo.

'You professional,' says Dmitri (true enough - George plays as a reserve for Solihull), 'VAT exemption only for private peoples in EU. You lie to shop. Very serious. Must pay fine of fifty times value, 40,000 Euros according Slovenian law, or come back with us for trial'.

'I only have 20,000 Euros,' stammers George. 'You can see my bank statements.'

'No need,' says Dmitri dryly. 'We already took it.'

Extreme? Impossible? Imaginary?

Just take a look at the Orwellian directive 'adopted' by our masters in Brussels this week (relevant wording highlighted):

According to the Commission, one of the key elements of the proposals, adopted on February 2, is that member states would no longer be able to "invoke bank secrecy in order to refuse cross border co-operation."

The proposal provides clearer and more precise rules in the area of cooperation. In particular, it sets up common rules of procedures, common forms, formats and channels for exchanging information. It also allows tax administration officials in one member state to be on the territory of another member state and to participate actively – with the same powers of inspection – in administrative enquiries carried out there.

The Commission proposes in particular to:

  • Cover all taxes and duties levied by the member states and their administrative subdivisions, as well as compulsory social security contributions;
  • Introduce compulsory spontaneous exchange of information concerning refunds of taxes made by national tax authorities to non residents;
  • Allow officials of one country to actively participate in administrative enquiries on the territory of another country;
  • Allow that recovery assistance is requested in an early stage of the recovery process, if this leads to an increase of the recovery chances; and
  • Simplify and rationalise the procedures to be used when requesting or providing mutual assistance.

Current arrangements for mutual assistance in the assessment and the recovery of taxes respectively date from 1977 (Council directive 1977/799/EEC) and 1976 (Council directive 1976/308/EEC).

Oh, well, if it's that old, it's obviously wrong, like the Magna Carta, the Bill of Rights and Habeas Corpus. Time we chucked out all this old pre-Napoleonic rubbish.

You have been reading an entry on the following blog:

Jeremy Hetherington-Gore Unleashed
Jeremy tackles the difficult issues head on!
Contact: jeremy@lowtax.net





Other recent entries in this blog:

10 January 2010
The Geese Are Dead

The British government is now face to face with the consequences of the mistakes it has made over the last ten years in regulating and taxing its gaming sector. It is scarcely the only country to have trodden the same error-strewn path, but in the case of the UK the damage is greater because of the highly profitable industry which the government's policies have now almost destroyed.

'For many reasons, increasingly few companies active in the British market are now regulated by the Commission,' bleats Minister for Sport Gerry Sutcliffe.

So what has happened?

In 2001 the Government replaced its age-old system of taxing punters with a 15% tax on gaming gross profits (and operators also have to pay VAT plus corporation tax plus a super contribution on any horse-racing turnover to a superannuated, cosy old industry nag called the Betting Levy Board). This step wouldn't necessarily have been fatal on its own, but when Internet betting started to supersede the betting-shop kind, and UK-based operators began to desert in droves to Malta, Gibraltar, Costa Rica and the Channel Islands, the government imposed a 15% tax on Internet gaming profits for all those firms which it licensed, and created a tough licensing regime under the Gaming Commission. But it could only license firms on its own territory and was forced to allow in all EU-based firms, without being able to tax them.

Now, with gaming tax revenues disappearing down a black hole, it is having a King Canute tantrum and wants to impose licensing (and hence taxation) on all the firms that operate in the UK (ie advertise there for punters). But why should the EU permit this? There are perfectly adequate regulatory, licensing and taxation regimes in Ireland, Malta and Gibraltar, all EU Member States, and where the ex-UK betting firms now prosper. Under what circumstances are they going to allow the UK to steal their revenues, or to replace their rules with a new set? And under what law can the UK forbid another properly-licensed EU operator from advertising freely throughout the EU?

The ECJ's Gambelli ruling in 2003 was unequivocal: gambling is a service and is subject to EU freedom of establishment rules. There is no way in which one EU Member State is going to be able to impose its own legislative practices on another one. The EU Commission has already attacked France on this issue. It is a mystery how Minister Sutcliffe could be so badly advised as even to try.

What the government should have done was to accept the inevitable and offer a light-touch, low-tax regime to compete with Malta et al, instead of hiding benhind a hypocritical ('protect our children') smokescreen. All it really cares about is the tax, and now it has lost that along with the gaming industry. The existing law is a dead letter, as the government is implicity acknowledging: you can ban a foreign firm from advertising on the Internet, but Berkshire is not Beijing, and if a 16-year old wants to place bets with a Costa Rica poker site using his father's Swiss credit card and bank account, who is going to stop him?

Even now it is not too late for the government to come to its senses, but under Pastor Gordon Brown's presbyterian theocracy, and faced with the Treasury's emptying treasure-chest, what chance is there of that? The few remaining British gaming firms will now pack their bags and leave. 'Mene, mene, tekel upharsin'.


01 January 2010
Reciprocity: That's The Name Of The Game

Reciprocity. It sounds so fair and reasonable, doesn't it? Argentina is applying the principle in its new border tax: if my country charges Argentinians 83.795 sea shells for a visa, then that's what Argentina will charge me to go there.

Sorry; wrong! Go the the bottom of the class. The Bible's Old Testament is big on reciprocity: 'an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth'; but Jesus knew better, saying that you should 'turn the other cheek'.

Reciprocity is what leads to trade wars and protectionism. You put a duty of 50% on my bananas, so I put a duty of 50% on your beef, and before you know it, trade volumes have slumped away to nothing. These sort of duties are especially popular – and damaging – in the EU, where they are frequently termed 'countervailing' duties. They are closely related to 'anti-dumping' duties, which should really be called anti-consumer duties.

If another country, or a manufacturer in another country, wants to sell off its surplus production at cost into my country, in order to help its cash flow, then the right response is for my country to say thank you very much and allow consumers (or manufacturers wanting that type of input) to take advantage of the lower prices that result. But of course that isn't what happens: the over-priced and usually highly unionized firms in my country which are damaged by the extra competition go wailing to the government (or the Commission in the case of the EU) and demand an anti-dumping duty to set them right. And they often get it, thus putting off the day when they might have to do something about their antiquated methods and under-skilled work-force.

'Social dumping' and its cousin 'fair trade' are other forms of reciprocity and are equally damaging to long-term competitivity and the interests of consumers. 'Social dumping' is when your country exports products to mine which have been made by workers who don't have the gold-plated working conditions that make my country uncompetitive. Taken to its logical conclusion, the principle of fair trade would ensure that all manufacturers around the world are equally uncompetitive, and indeed this is what its woolly-minded proponents do actually want. Unfortunately for them, that's not how human nature or the markets work.

There are better ways of protecting the interests of young children and oppressed working populations than with the sledgehammer of reciprocity, although they require long-term effort and investment on the part of developed countries. But it is seldom in the interests of politicians to look to the long term, and consumers are not educated to understand their own best interests – they are economically illiterate in most cases – so that the electorally popular sledgehammer continues to be used, to everybody's disadvantage other than the narrow mercantile class that called it down.

Sorry to be a bore. I promise not to preach this sermon again for another 12 months!


Latest 25 entries from all other blogs:

13 December 2009
No Pensions, Please, We're British

22 November 2009
The Ex-Wives' Charter, Norwegian Style

18 October 2009
To Will Or Not To Will?

03 May 2009
Time To Get Out Of Money?

04 April 2009
A New Economic Order

22 March 2009
Asset protection, bearer shares and anonymity

08 March 2009
There's No Fool Like A Gold Fool

19 February 2009
Time To Tax The Vegetarians!

17 January 2009
How Do You Achieve The Lifestyle Of Complete Freedom Without Having The First Million In The Bank?

23 November 2008
Please Securitize Me

19 November 2008
You Don’t Know Until You Go!

28 October 2008
Why the Financial Crisis Doesn't Really Matter

26 October 2008
Is Oil Cheap?

14 October 2008
The British Government’s ‘Ill Considered’ Use of Anti-Terrorist Financing Legislation against Iceland and the Wider Implications

07 October 2008
How and Why You Should Buy Physical Gold Offshore

04 October 2008
Thank You, Mr Paulson

22 September 2008
Scam Busters: Second Citizenship and Passport

05 September 2008
Offshore Banking: Failure to Open a Bank Account

29 August 2008
How to Avoid Envy by Keeping a Low Profile

21 August 2008
High Yield Offshore Investment Programs: Do They Exist?

20 August 2008
Blacklisted Offshore: Private Consultant's Opinion

18 August 2008
Why taking a vacation can improve your health – and wealth!

17 August 2008
Alphabet Soup

11 August 2008
Your Ships Come in Over a Calm Sea

07 August 2008
While Offshore Banking Giants are in Trouble

See the Lowtax Network Blogs page for older entries.


Popular Blogs:

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