BLOG

John Christensen ■ City of London Corporation in ‘failure to support transparency’ shocker

0
Not in favour of transparency

Not in favour of transparency

Father William Taylor, an elected member of the City of London Corporation, has blogged an interesting exchange he had last week with Mark Boleat, who chairs the Corporation’s Policy Committee.  The crux of the exchange is that the Corporation will not be supporting the proposal before the UK parliament for a public registry of beneficial ownership (i.e. the true owners of a company) on the grounds that this is a unilateral measure and transparency should only be adopted through a “coordinated international approach”.  This sounds very much like the City telling the government to kick the whole project into the long grass.

Taylor’s question to Boleat was straightforward:

“Does the Chairman of Policy agree with me that the City of London Corporation should publicly support the Prime Minister and his cross party allies in calling for the publication of the registers of beneficial ownership in the UK’s overseas territories and crown dependencies, my Lord Mayor?”

To which Boleat replied:

” . . . the key point I want to stress is that any effort to coordinate transparency needs to be coordinated at a international level. It should not be narrowly limited in scope and it should not place expectations on some not demanded of others.

The implication of the question for the court is that the UK’s Crown Dependencies and Overseas Territories are somehow dragging their feet on this issue.  In fact the UK does not have registers of beneficial ownership, nor do most other territories.

So it’s difficult to see why the crown dependencies and overseas territories should be expected to do something that is not done here in the UK.

There is legislation currently before parliament on this matter but it is controversial precisely because it is not in line with international practice and therefore would have limited impact.”

What interpretation can we draw from this exchange other than that the City of London Corporation does not support transparency?  Boleat’s reference to the position of the UK’s Crown Dependencies and Overseas Territories is disingenuous since he will know full well that they have clearly signalled to Prime Minister David Cameron that they will not respect his request that they create registries of beneficial ownership.

In 2013 Cameron committed to Britain leading the way to creating public registries of beneficial ownership.  He subsequently wrote in 2014 to the OTs and CDs asking them – politely – to follow suit.  All good so far.  But words are cheap.  In December 2014 we blogged that little progress had been made between 2013 and end-2104.  Worse was to come.  In our January 2015 Taxcast, we reported that loopholes (which will undoubtedly become massive in the course of time) are being considered for the UK registry.

Last week’s exchange between William Taylor and Mark Boleat at the Court of Common Council is an important indicator of City attitudes towards transparency.  They cannot directly argue against transparency, which is a motherhood and apple pie issue as far as public opinion is concerned, but they will delay and permanently stall transparency initiatives in order to protect Britain’s spiders web of secrecy jurisdictions.

Mark BoleatBoleat (pictured) symbolises the extent to which tax havenry runs through the veins of the City.  A Jerseyman by origin, in addition to his role as the Corporation’s Chair of Policy, he also chairs the Jersey Competition Regulatory Authority, the Guernsey Competition and Regulatory Authority and the States of Jersey Development Company.  Proof, if such was needed, of the proximity of interests between London and its offshore satellites.

The final word goes to Taylor, quoted in Nick Shaxson’s Treasure Islands about the soft power the City of London Corporation exerts as a bastion of the British Establishment:

“Taylor would dress in a clerical frock coat and get invited to grand dinners and lunches with the likes of French President Nicolas Sarkozy and Brazil’s Luis Inácio Lula da Silva. “Don’t underestimate the power of dinners and fine claret,” Taylor said. “Being invited to these banquets will often settle down any revolutionary urges.””

 

 

 

Related articles

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.