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A range of perspectives
Session objective: This tool expenses learners to some of the arguments from key thinkers that are for and against changes to the global tax rules.
Learning objective(s):
- Learners will debate some of the arguments for and against tax havens
- Learners will be exposed to other points of view to their own.
Time required: 45 minutes
Group size: 24
Materials required:
- Tax justice fact-sheet, one per group
- Scissors
- ‘Perspectives’ sheet cut into individual slips of paper, one whole sheet (i.e. all slips) per group
Methodology:
- Explain the objectives of the activity
- Split the whole group into groups of 4.
- Provide each group with a copy of the tax justice fact sheet and the slips below. Ask each person to take one of two slips.
- They should each read out their slips in turn for the rest of their group until all are read out and then place all slips in front of them.
- Ask the groups to discuss the differences between the various perspectives and to respond to some of these questions (have these questions written on a visible flip). Encourage each group to debate with one another in a civil manner, and not to speak over one another. If necessary, employ the use of a speaking stick for each group.
- What views do you agree with most?
- What are the reasons for the differences in views?
- Do you think there are views that are missing?
- Do you think each speaker is telling the truth?
- What are the global justice issues raised in the various perspectives?
- Ask everyone to arrange themselves in a circle. Ask each group to give feedback to the wider group around the key themes, points of agreement and and points of disagreement in their group. Do this for a full group discussion on global taxation.
Tax Justice Factsheet
|
Perspectives
Large Accountancy Firm “A worrying tendency seems to have emerged among external stakeholders to make ‘moral’ judgments about tax planning and to expect companies to manage their tax affairs in a ‘moral’ way”. A representative of a large accountancy firm writing in a financial magazine. |
Southern Government “One of the most pressing issues facing our continent is to embark on a path to free African countries from their dependence on foreign assistance and indebtedness. An indispensable condition of this is the strengthening of our capacity to mobilise domestic resources.” African Tax Administrators’ Forum (a forum of African civil servants), Pretoria, 2008 |
Southern Government “Businesses deliberately blur the line between their country of origin and the countries they operate within, in order to avoid paying tax.” Darmin Nasution, Indonesia’s Director General of Taxation, 2009 |
Northern Government “We will set out new measures to crack down on the tax havens that siphon off money from developing countries – money that could otherwise be spent on bednets, vaccinations, economic development and jobs.” Gordon Brown, UK Prime Minister, 2009 |
Tax Justice Network “We support a level playing field on tax and we oppose loopholes and distortions in tax and regulation, and the abuses that flow from them. We promote tax compliance and we oppose tax evasion, tax avoidance, and all the mechanisms that enable owners and controllers of wealth to escape their responsibilities to the societies on which they and their wealth depend. Tax havens, or secrecy jurisdictions as we prefer to call them, lie at the centre of our concerns, and we oppose them”. |
Christian Aid, Anti-Poverty Group “Without facilitators in the developed world, those seeking to avoid paying their dues in the developing world would be unable to operate. But there are plenty of people willing to help: well-paid lawyers and accountants designing aggressive tax-avoidance strategies; bankers; and the administrators of tax havens where the proceeds can be hidden in complex offshore structures of trusts and front companies. The main techniques of evading tax are well known but hard to prove”. |
Southern perspective “Taxation is key to increasing our legitimacy and ability to make our own decisions.” Mary Baine, Commissioner General, Rwanda Revenue Service, 2009 |
G8 |
Paschal Donohue, Ireland’s Finance Minister, 2021 “I do believe that smaller countries need to be able to use tax planning as a legitimate instrument to compensate for what they do not have.” |
David McWilliams, Economist, 2021 in the Irish Times In the late 1980s, Ireland was thwarted by a lack of capital. When you have no capital of your own, you must import it and you do this by making capital cheap. How do you make the deployment of capital cheaper in your country? You tax it less. |
David McWilliams, Economist, 2021 in the Irish Times |
Janet Yellen, Head of US Treasury |
Afrodad, Tax Justice Africa & Alternative Information and Development Centre Africa |
