US$20
billion of foreign capital in Vietnam from 'tax havens'
VietNamNet
Bridge - British Virgin Islands (BVI) is an archipelago of about 153 km2,
with GDP of more than $1 billion but businesses registered here have invested
$19.3 billion into Vietnam.
BVI currently
has more than 850,000 enterprises, many times more than the population of
28,000 of this Caribbean island nation.
The words
"tax haven" or "pure heaven" refer to the BVI and some
other places in the world - the economies that eliminate almost all taxes on
businesses. This is the ideal destination for global corporations. BVI
currently has more than 850,000 enterprises, many times more than the
population of 28,000 of this Caribbean island nation.
The
businesses registered in BIV not only operate in BVI but they bring a huge
amount of capital to invest around the world and in recent years, tens of
billion US dollars of direct investment capital (FDI) were poured into
Vietnam from BIV.
According
to the Ministry of Planning and Investment, by the end of 2015, BVI was among
the top 5 countries and territories investing in Vietnam, besides South
Korea, Japan, Singapore and Taiwan. BVI had 623 investment projects, with
total capital amounted to $19.3 billion.
Some large
projects invested by companies from BVI are Vinacapital Trade Center Company
Limited with $325 million invested in commercial centers, hotels, office
building, hotel services, and real estate; GVD Vietnam Company Limited with
$300 million invested in apartments and travel services; Worldon Vietnam Co.,
Ltd. with registered investment of $300 million to produce high-end garments
in HCM City; CJ CGV Vietnam Co. with the nationwide chain of cinemas.
Recently,
the Foreign Investment Department said that the US direct investment flows to
Vietnam not only comes from the companies founded in the US but also through
a number of their branches operating in the BVI such as the case of Intel,
Chevron, Procter & Gamble or ConocoPhillips.
In the
field of indirect investment on the stock market, the most famous investment
fund of BVI in Vietnam is Dragon Capital. Founded in 1994 in BVI, Dragon
Capital is the oldest foreign investment fund in Vietnam, with total assets
of approximately $1.25 billion. Its investment portfolio consists of stocks,
bonds, real estate, and clean technology.
As of May
10, the biggest investments of Dragon Capital in Vietnam are: VND3,564
billion in the Vietnam Dairy Products JSC (Vinamilk), VND1,143 billion in the
Asia Commercial Bank (ACB); VND888 billion at FPT; VND1,131 billion at the
HCM City Securities Company; VND969 billion in the Hoa Phat Group; and
VND1,880 billion in Masan.
In
addition, the fund holds stakes in the Saigon Securities Company (SSI), REE,
Phu Nhuan Jewelry JSC (PNJ), Hoa Sen Corporation, Phu My Fertilizer. Its
Chief Executive Officer is Dominic Scriven.
Founded in
2006 in BVI, Vietnam Asset Management Limited (VAM) is also an investment
fund investing largely into pharmaceutical, food, beverage, and biotech
companies.
Some other
financial institutions formed in tax havens that have poured money into Vietnam
are Indochina Capital Adviser, PXP Vietnam Asset Management Ltd., Vietnam
Holding Asset Management Ltd., Clear Water Capital Partners Singapore PTE...
According
to the Panama papers, BVI is taking the lead of the tax havens with 113,648
offshore companies established by the law firm Mossack Fonseca while Panama
has only 48,400 companies.
This
"tax haven" has long become an attractive destination of world
investors. Establishing companies in the BVI and investing in other countries
optimizes costs for transnational corporations.
Companies
and investors will not be taxed on profit of the transfer of shares and
dividends. Nearly 100% of taxes are abolished. Inherited assets are not
subject to tax.
In
particular, the companies established in BVI can invest in other countries
and earn billions of dollars of profit. They don’t have to declare this to
governments.
The only
financial obligation of the companies in BVI is payment of $350 of
establishment costs and a similar amount to maintain business operations annually.
The time for registering a new company may be only a day.
Financial
mechanisms in BVI are liberal, without having to submit financial reports or
declaration of the owner.
BVI
Enterprise Law 2004 allows the establishment of enterprises with a shareholder
and a member of the Board of Directors. Companies don’t need to have legal
capital, their stocks don’t need par value, there is no secretariat, and
there is no need to report to the authorities about the changes ...
Enterprises have complete freedom to operate here. Confidentiality of
information in BVI is high.
That's why
the BVI is accused of being a tax haven, an ideal place for transfer pricing,
money laundering, slush fund ... for the global financial world.
Experts
said that BVI allows shareholders to transfer overseas profits to this island
without declaring it to the tax authorities.
They said
Vietnam should be careful and closely manage the firms established in the BVI
in terms of legal and financial obligations.
Businesses
can take advantage of the liberal financial mechanism in the BVI to evade
tax, conduct transfer pricing and money laundering.
Experts
also said that bogus companies are also established in the BVI, impersonating
famous companies in other country to swindle.
To manage
the risks and limit the impact of tax havens, the Vietnamese Government has
signed agreements to avoid double taxation with the same earnings with
countries such as Singapore, the US, France ... However, taxing once is not
attractive enough compared to the full exemption of taxes from tax havens.
According
to statistics from the Ministry of Planning & Investment, many tax havens
around the world have invested strongly in Vietnam.
By the end
of 2015, Cayman Islands had 67 projects with approximately $6.3 billion, Luxembourg
with $1.9 billion, Bermuda with six projects worth about $232 million, Panama
with $51 million, Bahamas $108 million, New Zealand $96 million, Macao $57
million, and the Isle of Man $35 million.
Enterprises
in the two financial centers also have large tax competitiveness as Singapore
and Hong Kong (China) also heavily invested in Vietnam with $35 billion and
$15.5 billion, respectively.
Translated
by Khuyen Bui, VNE
|
Thứ Năm, 12 tháng 5, 2016
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