Introduction | 
                        
                        
                          | 4.1  | 
                          This chapter contains the Committee’s findings  in relation to two agreements: 
                           
                            
                              - Agreement  between the Government of Australia and the Government of Antigua and Barbuda  on the Exchange of Information with Respect to Taxes, Saint John’s, Antigua 30  January 2007; and
 
                              - Agreement  between the Government of Australia and the Government of the Kingdom of the  Netherlands in Respect of the Netherlands Antilles for the Exchange of  Information with Respect to Taxes, Canberra, 1 March 2007
 
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                          | 4.2 | 
                          The Agreements enable information to be  exchanged on criminal and civil tax matters between Australia and the Netherlands   Antilles and Australia  and Antigua and Barbuda.1 The Agreements also incorporate safeguards to protect the legitimate interests  of taxpayers. As the obligations contained in both treaties are largely the  same, this chapter will discuss both.2 
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                          Background | 
                        
                        
                          | 4.3 | 
                          The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and  Development (OECD) has developed a model Tax Information Exchange Agreement  (TIEA) to facilitate effective exchange of information between countries. The  model TIEA is designed to facilitate negotiations between OECD member countries  and the 33 low tax jurisdictions which are collectively known as ‘participating  partners’. Australia’s  agreements with the Netherlands Antilles and  with Antigua and Barbuda  are based on the model TIEA.3 
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                          | 4.4  | 
                          The Committee was informed by representatives  from the Department of the Treasury that: 
                            We have contacted 31  countries in this program. Of those 31 countries, we have signed agreements  with three to date. Of the remaining countries, you could say that we are in  substantive negotiations with them and are very close to finalisation; there  might be a few issues outstanding. We have had preliminary discussions with  another five countries about tax information exchange agreements. For the  others, a handful have said they are not interested and others have said they  want double tax agreements. It is not current government policy to offer those  agreements and that is certainly not compatible with the position that the OECD  and our colleagues in the OECD have been taking.4  
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                          | 4.5  | 
                          The Committee was informed that an estimated $5  billion is moved out of Australia  each year to tax havens around the world.5 Most of this amount is legitimate but a tax haven’s legal framework and  communication systems can also be used in arrangements designed to avoid paying  tax elsewhere.6 TIEAs assist in the investigation of tax evasion and money laundering by  establishing mechanisms to exchange information to establish the extent and  nature of the tax evaded.7 
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                          | 4.6  | 
                          The two agreements currently before the  Committee are the second and third agreements of this kind. The first was  signed with Bermuda in 2005 but has not yet  entered into force.8 
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                          Obligations | 
                        
                        
                          | 4.7 | 
                          The primary obligation between Australia and  the Netherlands Antilles and between Australia and Antigua and Barbuda  is to exchange information, upon request, where the information is relevant to  the: 
                      - Determination,  assessment and collection of taxes;
 
                        - Recovery  and enforcement of tax claims; or
 
                       - Investigation  or prosecution of tax matters.9
  
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                          | 4.8  | 
                          Each party must do so irrespective of whether  the conduct being investigated is a crime under its domestic law.10 
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                          | 4.9  | 
                          There is no provision in either Agreement for  the routine or voluntary exchange of information between the two parties.11 
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                          | 4.10 | 
                          If requested by the other party in either  Agreement, Australia  is obliged to supply information on any federal taxes administered by the  Commissioner of Taxation.12 To enable this obligation to be fulfilled, Australia must ensure the  Commission of Taxation has the necessary authority to obtain and provide  information held by banks, other financial institutions and a range of other  bodies.13 The Netherlands Antilles and Antigua and Barbuda  have a corresponding obligation for requests by Australia. 
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                          | 4.11 | 
                          Where the information available to the  Commissioner of Taxation is insufficient to enable compliance with the request,  Australia  must use all relevant information gathering methods to furnish details to the  other party, even where it is not needed for domestic tax purposes. This is  consistent with the model TIEA.14 
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                          | 4.12 | 
                          Information provided under the Agreements must  be treated confidentially by all parties, can only be revealed to specified  persons or authorities concerned with the taxation matters covered by the  Agreement and can only be used for such purposes. All parties remain bound by  confidentiality provisions of the Agreement even after the termination of the  Agreements.15 
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                          | 4.13  | 
                          The Committee was informed by representatives  from the Department of the Treasury that the Agreements contain appropriate safeguards: 
                            In particular,  countries cannot engage in fishing expeditions or request information that is  unlikely to be relevant to the tax affairs of the specific taxpayer, and any  information exchanged must be treated as confidential. The safeguards also  confirm when a request for information can be reasonably denied. Implementation  of these proposed agreements will have a negligible cost. Broader revenue  impacts are unquantifiable because the level of revenue that may be reclaimed  from taxpayers avoiding their tax liabilities or the level of lost revenue that  may be prevented in the future are currently unknown.16  
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                          Costs | 
                        
                        
                          | 4.14 | 
                          It is likely that Australia will be making requests  rather than receiving them under the Agreement. As a result, the financial costs  of the Agreements are likely to be associated with the administration of  requests to the Netherlands Antilles and Antigua and Barbuda  and the analysis of information by the ATO.17 
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                          | 4.15 | 
                          The ATO has entered into a Memorandum of  Understanding with both the Netherlands Antilles Ministry of Finance and the  Antiguan and Barbudan Ministry of Finance under which the ATO will pay for  certain extraordinary costs borne by the other party.18 Some examples are: 
                            
                              - Reasonable  costs of engaging experts, interpreters or translators;
 
                              - Reasonable  litigation costs in relation to a specific request for information; and
 
                              - Reasonable  costs for obtaining depositions or testimony.
 
                             
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                          | 4.16 | 
                          The Committee was informed that overall, the  cost of the TIEA program will be approximately equivalent to one additional  full time employee.19 This will be absorbed into the ATO’s existing exchange of information program.20 
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                          Implementation and consultation | 
                        
                        
                          | 4.17  | 
                          The obligations found in both Agreements are met  through existing legislation, the International  Tax Agreements Act 1953 (Cth).21 
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                          | 4.18 | 
                          No public consultation was undertaken prior to  the conclusion of either agreement.22 
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                          Conclusion and recommendations | 
                        
                        
                          | 4.19 | 
                          The Committee supports the Agreements as 
                            These agreements are  an important tool in Australia’s  efforts to combat offshore tax evasion. The proposed agreements will provide for  effective exchange of information between Australia and these countries,  promoting fairness and enhancing Australia’s ability to administer  and enforce its domestic tax laws.23 
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                          | 4.20 | 
                          As such, the Committee considers that the  Agreements are in the national interest.  | 
                        
                        
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                          Recommendation 3The Committee supports the Agreement between the Government of Australia  and the Government of Antigua and Barbuda on the Exchange of Information with  Respect to Taxes, Saint John’s, Antigua 30 January 2007 and recommends that binding treaty action be taken.  | 
                        
                        
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                          Recommendation 4The Committee supports the Agreement between the Government of Australia and the Government of the  Kingdom of the Netherlands in Respect of the Netherlands Antilles for the  Exchange of Information with Respect to Taxes, Canberra, 1 March 2007 and  recommends that binding treaty action be taken.  | 
                        
                      
       
       
                      
                        | 1  | 
                        National Interest Analysis (NIA), Antigua and Barbuda Agreement NIA, para. 6, Antilles  Agreement NIA, para. 6. Back | 
                      
                      
                        | 2  | 
                        Antigua  and Barbuda Agreement NIA, para. 6, Antilles Agreement NIA, para. 6. Back | 
                      
                      
                        | 3  | 
                        Antigua  and Barbuda Agreement NIA, paras 10-11, Antilles Agreement NIA,  
paras  10-11. Back | 
                      
                      
                        | 4  | 
                        Mr Michael Rawstron, Transcript of Evidence, 22 June 2007, p. 30. Back | 
                      
                      
                        | 5  | 
                        Antigua  and Barbuda Agreement NIA, para. 13, Antilles Agreement NIA, para. 13.  Back | 
                      
                      
                        | 6  | 
                        Antigua  and Barbuda Agreement NIA, para. 13, Antilles Agreement NIA, para. 13. Back | 
                      
                      
                        | 7  | 
                        Antigua  and Barbuda Agreement NIA, para. 13, Antilles Agreement NIA, para. 13. Back | 
                      
                      
                        | 8  | 
                        See JSCOT Report 73; see Mr Graham   Whyte, Transcript of Evidence, 22 June 2007, p. 31. Back | 
                      
                      
                        | 9  | 
                        Antigua  and Barbuda Agreement NIA, para. 18, Article 1 of the Treaty; Antilles  Agreement NIA, para. 18, Article 1 of the Treaty. Back | 
                      
                      
                        | 10  | 
                        Antigua  and Barbuda Agreement NIA, para. 18, Article 5(2) of the Treaty; Antilles  Agreement NIA, para. 18, Article 5(1) of the Treaty. Back | 
                      
                      
                        | 11  | 
                        Antigua  and Barbuda Agreement NIA, para. 18; Antilles  Agreement NIA, para. 18. Back | 
                      
                      
                        | 12  | 
                        Antigua  and Barbuda Agreement NIA, para. 19, Article 5(4) of the Treaty; Antilles  Agreement NIA, para. 19, Article 5(3) of the Treaty. Back | 
                      
                      
                        | 13  | 
                        Antigua  and Barbuda Agreement NIA, para. 19; Antilles Agreement NIA, para. 19. Back | 
                      
                      
                        | 14  | 
                        Antigua  and Barbuda Agreement NIA, para. 21, Article 5(2) of the Treaty; Antilles  Agreement NIA, para. 21, Article 5(2) of the Treaty. This is consistent with Article  26 of the OECD Model Convention on Income  and on Capital, which was updated in 2005. Back | 
                      
                      
                        | 15  | 
                        Antigua  and Barbuda Agreement NIA, para. 23, Article 8 of the Treaty; Antilles  Agreement NIA, para. 23, Article 8 of the Treaty. Back | 
                      
                      
                        | 16  | 
                        Mr Michael Rawstron, Transcript of Evidence, 22 June 2007, p. 28. Back | 
                      
                      
                        | 17  | 
                         Antigua and Barbuda Agreement NIA,  paras 25-28; Antilles Agreement NIA, paras 25-28. Back | 
                      
                      
                        | 18  | 
                        Antigua and Barbuda Agreement NIA,  paras 25-28; Antilles Agreement NIA, paras 25-28. Back | 
                      
                      
                        | 19  | 
                        Antigua and Barbuda Agreement NIA, para. 28; Antilles Agreement  NIA, para. 28. Back | 
                      
                      
                        | 20  | 
                        Antigua  and Barbuda Agreement NIA, para. 28; Antilles Agreement NIA, para. 28. Back | 
                      
                      
                        | 21 | 
                        Antigua  and Barbuda Agreement NIA, para. 24; Antilles Agreement NIA, para. 24. Back | 
                      
                      
                        | 22  | 
                        Antigua and Barbuda Agreement NIA  Consultation annex; Antilles Agreement, NIA Consultation annex. Back | 
                      
                      
                        | 23  | 
                        Mr Michael Rawstron, Transcript of Evidence, 22 June 2007, p. 30. Back |