Page 4 of 6 FirstFirst ... 23456 LastLast
Results 46 to 60 of 78

Thread: Has The IFSC Attracted Dubious Activities ?

  1. #46
    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Location
    in the national interest
    Posts
    12,632

    Default Maidir Le: Has The IFSC Attracted Dubious Activities ?

    Fianna Fáil is proposing:

    • Establish an internship programme similar to JobBridge but focused on providing 1,000internships solely in the IFSC. Graduates would receive their job seekers benefit alongwith an
    additional € 100 weekly payment from participating companies.

    • The internship programme would be time limited, approximately 6-9 months, and therewould be clear criteria about the kind of work and training that interns would engage inand also
    to ensure that it does not displace any jobs in the sector.

    • Double the amount of money available to the Summit Finuas Network, which providesenterprise led education training programmes within the IFSC. At present, the FinuasNetwork
    receives approximately €1million from the State each year.

    • We believe these extra funds must be used to significantly expand the number of freeplaces for young unemployed graduates and young people on the live register who
    are interested in pursuing a career in the IFSC.

    • Ensure that each state supported bank invests in our young people and puts in placean internship programme for third level graduates. This programme would be funded bythe
    banks rather than the State

  2. #47
    Join Date
    Mar 2010
    Posts
    6,558

    Default Re: Has The IFSC Attracted Dubious Activities ?

    Some good stuff here on IFSC -

    This is revenue that Irish Revenue is simply not interested in collecting. Allowing companies to avoid tax in this way would suggest that the Irish legislature is simply a branch of one of the major four accountancy firms that offer tax advice to clients who wish to set up business in Ireland.

    There has been plenty of debate about effective tax rates, with perhaps the most notorious being Google, which, according to Bloomberg, was able to reduce their overseas tax rate to 2.4% through various mechanisms available in Ireland, in tandem with tax havens like Bermuda. There are plenty of other examples, however, such as Boston Scientific which had an effective tax rate of 0.54% for 2001 ? 2003; Forest Laboratories had an effective tax rate of 6.2% for 2005-07; Jansen Pharmaceutical had an ETR of 8.2 for 2003-05; between 2004-5 Symantic had an effective tax rate of zero.


    http://apologia-scandalize.blogspot....x-rate-is.html
    Thomas Jefferson : Banking Establishments are More Dangerous to our Liberties than Standing Armies.

  3. #48

    Default Re: Has The IFSC Attracted Dubious Activities ?

    The Irish Government has no control over the IFSC which is effectively a self-governing corporate island off the Irish coast.

    I recall the debate about resource finds by Tony O'Reilly's company and the notion there'd be loads of tax.

    I looked back at what his company paid in tax in Ireland over a ten year period and it was sweet F/A.

    There is a system of 'deferring' taxation open to companies and wealthy indviduals which adds up in anyone else's mind as a way of avoiding tax altogether.

    Crucially all these corporates are routing money only through Ireland and other jurisdictions on their way to a zero rate tax haven such as the Bahamas. The only time they surface in Ireland or Netherlands is as one leg of a two legged transaction which attracts tax relief but no tax.

    The IFSC tail has wagged the dog of the Irish Exchequer ever since it was opened up by Charlie McCreevy.
    Think National. Act Local. Oh- and superstition is just the dark matter of human history.

  4. #49
    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Location
    in the national interest
    Posts
    12,632

    Default Re: Has The IFSC Attracted Dubious Activities ?

    lulz

    Mitt Romney investment in Ireland attacked by Barack Obama. Ireland labelled a tax haven

    http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/...319428255.html

  5. #50
    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Location
    in the national interest
    Posts
    12,632

    Default Re: Has The IFSC Attracted Dubious Activities ?

    £13 trillion of wealth hidden offshore – as much as the American and Japanese GDPs put together.

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/2...fshore-economy

    ....at least £13tn – perhaps up to £20tn – has leaked out of scores of countries into secretive jurisdictions such as Switzerland and the Cayman Islands with the help of private banks, which vie to attract the assets of so-called high net-worth individuals. Their wealth is, as Henry puts it, "protected by a highly paid, industrious bevy of professional enablers in the private banking, legal, accounting and investment industries taking advantage of the increasingly borderless, frictionless global economy".

  6. #51
    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Location
    in the national interest
    Posts
    12,632

    Default Re: Has The IFSC Attracted Dubious Activities ?

    Donagh Brennan's piece from the last issue of lookleft is now online

    http://www.lookleftonline.org/2012/0...ne-of-failure/

  7. #52
    Join Date
    Mar 2010
    Location
    heart of Europe
    Posts
    11,400

    Default Re: Has The IFSC Attracted Dubious Activities ?

    Enda is bringing some jobs home! Up you boy you!!

    WESTPORT is in line for a welcome jobs boost this week, with Taoiseach Enda Kenny set to announce on Friday that The Lafferty Group is to locate a new base in the town.
    While the number of jobs to be created by the financial services company has not been released, The Mayo News believes that initially, around a dozen people will be employed, largely in graduate-level positions. If the Westport office develops according to expectations, this figure will significantly increase within a number of years.
    Based in London, and with offices in various locations around the world, The Lafferty Group is a major provider of advanced knowledge services for the global financial industry, with particular specialisations in the fields of retail banking, cards and payments and central banking. Its founder, chairman and CEO is Ballaghaderreen native Michael Lafferty, a former Financial Times journalist. He started the company in 1981.
    A number of senior executives of The Lafferty Group visited Westport on a number of occasions in recent months and scouted potential office locations across the town. Mayo County Council, the Western Development Commission (WDC) and the Industrial Development Authority (IDA) were also involved in the search and in the deal to bring The Lafferty Group to Westport. However, none was in a position to comment further on the matter ahead of the investment being officially unveiled.
    Westport seems like the logical location for a company specialising in banking
    "The land Coillte Teo is now selling for development was given to them by the State in 1988 to ensure that our woodlands were run commercially, not to enable them to sell the family silver to service bank loans".
    - Friends of the Irish Environment, 28.04.2003

  8. #53

    Default Re: Has The IFSC Attracted Dubious Activities ?

    How can they seek to attract banking yet condemn fornication? In both areas of endeavour someone is always going to end up f**ked.
    Think National. Act Local. Oh- and superstition is just the dark matter of human history.

  9. #54
    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Location
    in the national interest
    Posts
    12,632

    Default Re: Has The IFSC Attracted Dubious Activities ?

    Seven people between them sit on the boards of 1,284 companies in the Irish Financial Services Centre.
    http://www.broadsheet.ie/2012/08/14/...or-efficiency/

  10. #55
    Join Date
    Feb 2010
    Location
    Rockall
    Posts
    54,692

    Default Re: Has The IFSC Attracted Dubious Activities ?

    Brilliant stuff from the Story and Conor McCabe.


    http://www.irishleftreview.org/2012/...rvices-sector/

  11. #56
    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Location
    in the national interest
    Posts
    12,632

    Default Re: Has The IFSC Attracted Dubious Activities ?


  12. #57
    Join Date
    Dec 2010
    Posts
    387

    Default Re: Has The IFSC Attracted Dubious Activities ?

    Quote Originally Posted by Dr. FIVE View Post
    While we are on the subject of tax havens and the British empire here is some more food for thought (albeit from last year).
    http://treasureislands.org/northern-...s-tax-havenry/
    Do the right thing.

  13. #58
    Kev Bar Guest

    Default Re: Has The IFSC Attracted Dubious Activities ?

    Mark Malone was just tweeting this link which looks like it is pertinent.

    The subprime crisis and the emergence of the ‘shadow banking sector’ and subsequent
    collapse described in this paper is an example of a Minsky process. Financial innovation
    is a pervasive aspect of market based economies. Minsky has argued that a boom based
    on financial innovation necessarily results in a collapse. Minsky argues part of the
    solution to instability by financial innovation is through regulation that is through
    constraints on debt levels both for the personal sector and the corporate especially the
    financial sector.
    The emergence of the shadow banking sytem illustrates the problem of regulating
    complex financial products, operating across a number of different jurisdictions one or
    more of which may be a tax haven. The recent controversies in relation to Goldman
    Sachs illustrates the issue of information asymmetries between purchasers of complex
    instrument and those who create and market them (Schwartz and Dash, 2010). It also
    illustrates conflicts of interest that allows one party to the contract to exploit information
    asymmetries. Underlying these issues is the issue of the whether derivates have any social
    value (Soros, 2010) or economic value (Grantham, 2010). In this context the much
    criticised unilateral action by Germany to ban certain derivative trading in Germany is
    likely to be followed by other countries ((Wiesman, et al., 2010; Ewing, 2010).
    The enforced liquidation of the Carlyle Capital Corporation which in February 2008 was
    reported as managing $21.7 billion in funds (New York Times 14/3/08) is a good
    example of the difficulties in regulation following from different country locations of
    discrete parts of the group. The New York Times comments (March 14, 2008) that
    “Carlyle Capital’s problems also provide a glimpse into the challenges faced by the
    usually secretive hedge fund industry because, unlike most such funds, Carlyle Capital is
    publicly listed.”. While true that Carlyle Capital was publicly listed in Amsterdam it was
    registered in Guernsey to benefit from a low tax regime (Guardian Newspaper 14/8/08).
    Seven of its funds were listed on the Dublin Stock Exchange, three of these funds were
    registered in the Cayman Islands, and a further three were registered in the Cayman
    Islands and Delaware.
    These and other examples cited in this paper confirm the need for extensive regulatory
    and other institutional reform, There is especially an urgent need to take into
    consideration the use of low tax regimes/tax havens by financial firms. For countries
    based in the EU this is likely to mean an EU based regulator as in the ECB model.

    http://www.schumpeter2010.dk/index.p...ewFile/374/185

  14. #59
    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Location
    in the national interest
    Posts
    12,632

    Default Re: Has The IFSC Attracted Dubious Activities ?

    Bernie Madoff's liquidators are chasing money round Dublin 2 say the Phoenix

  15. #60

    Default Re: Has The IFSC Attracted Dubious Activities ?

    The only reason the IFSC and Irish Stock Exchange exist at all is for people with money too shady even for the City of London.

    And thats saying something. I recall the Financial Times referring to Dublin as the 'wild west'. And they aren't too picky about whose money they accept.
    Think National. Act Local. Oh- and superstition is just the dark matter of human history.

Page 4 of 6 FirstFirst ... 23456 LastLast

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •