For Sale: Shady Panama Hats, Tailors, Laundromats
Ramon Fonseca, of the suddenly famous law firm Mossack &
Fonseca housed in an impressive steel
and glass building in the canal country of Panama, could be the real Tailor
of Panama.
Has John Le Carre’s fictional Harry Pendel just come to life?
Except that this Fonseca tailor-makes companies to suit.
He does so for the rich, famous, powerful, and dangerous too.
The fictional ex-convict Harry made bespoke suits for the Who’s Who of Panama,
pretending he was Savile Row, not prison-craft. Plus he tailored information
for MI6 to overthrow the government.
The juicy ‘Panama Papers’ from Fonseca, involving laundered
money, dodged sanctions, and evaded taxes, some 240,000 companies over 40 years,
has just come to light.
Fonseca insists his is a respectable firm, perfectly legitimate
and he is just a ‘victim of an international campaign against privacy’.
But this line isn’t working, particularly when the top link
in the scandal involves Vladimir Putin, and at least $ 2 billion. Xi Jinping,
running an anti-corruption drive in China, along with protectee Nawaz Sharif,
features too.
The client list roll calls kings, 72 former heads of state,
prime ministers, lawyers, international mafia, solo gangsters, politicians,
dictators, businessmen, bankers, actors, footballers - and FIFA too.
It is so ubiquitous that it seems as if those who are not
using Mossack-Fonseca must be using someone else. But, the tax haven/offshore
company business is badly threatened. Discretion is clearly breached. The old
pen- and-ink code secreted in vaults has given way to hackable computers despite
encryption.
This present lot, passed on over a year ago, is from just one
anonymous ‘partial hack’. It exposed 11.5 million documents, 2.6 tetrabytes, on
214,000 shell companies, set up between the 1970s and 2016.
The trove was sent first to the German paper Suddeutsche
Zeitung, and then distributed to a filmy-sounding ‘International Consortium
of Investigative Journalists’, in 78 countries, and 107 media organisations, to
make sense out of.
This is practically everybody in the international media
business.
India received its portion into The Indian Express where
staffers have been beavering away for over eight months on code-named ‘Project
Prometheus’. Discovering ‘beneficial ownership’ through a thicket of proxies is
no easy task! That’s where Ramon Fonseca earns his money.
The analysed news has now just broken, and unlike in the old
print era, there are no ‘yesterday’s papers’. This stuff is going to be
immortal in cyberspace.
The Indian actors on the list, pose various dilemmas of
culpability or lack thereof. It is to do, at least partially, with the
ponderousness of a closed economy opening up at a snail’s pace.
All the shell companies set up for Indians before 2004, were
simply not allowed for resident , repeat resident, Indians. But, if you
had a non-resident friend or relative signing up, there is no prima facie
wrong-doing involved.
Then, if there is business and profit, and resident Indians
are indeed ‘beneficial owners’, there may be a case of possible tax evasion.
But, usually it is seen to that there are no profits to tax, given the
expensive lawyers and financial experts that attend. And people turn NRI at
will.
Why go far. It’s
amazing how many domestic companies with prosperous promoters/shareholders,
happily run at a loss year after year, all profits presumably gone to cash!
The legal position is also typically tortuous. In 2004, the
RBI allowed, for the first time, $25,000 per resident individual p.a., to be
taken abroad officially, no questions asked. Even this amount was quite enough
to set up shell companies, because nobody explicitly said you couldn’t.
This was subsequently liberalised, in stages, to $250,000 per
individual, reduced in a foreign exchange crunch, increased again etc.. So now,
individuals and families could buy property, shares, but still, though it was
not made crystal clear, set up offshore companies.
In August 2013, an ODI, overseas-direct- investment permission
was, at last, granted by the RBI.
Early days as it is, many named Indians, have responded they
are not the ‘beneficial owners’ anyway.
It will take a month of Sundays to prove anything, and it is
doubtful if the Indian authorities have the expertise, political will, or the
manpower to accomplish the task.
It makes for a fine entertainment though- imagining so many
prominent people caught in embarrassing circumstances. Look at the names: KP
Singh, Vinod Adani, Harish Salve, Jehangir
Sorabjee, Amitabh Bachchan, Sameer
Gehlaut, Iqbal Mirchi, Garware, Shishir
Barjoria, Onkar Kanwar, Poonawalla, Rajendra Patil, the Salgaocars, Sivasailam,
Rashid Mir.
There are over 500 Indian names, with more specifics to be
revealed.
What prompts this? Maybe income and corporate taxes applied
to a mere 3% of the population instead of everyone. And of this hapless 3% , a
miniscule section are rich enough to
need Panamanian help. Then consider the
onerous indirect taxes applied. Plus the black money sent off via hawala that
needs tending.
The ambiguous drafting of our laws and administrative orders
leaves room for interpretation. Smart
chartered accountants are trained to exploit loop-holes, even now, with the
Modi government promising stern action. Its politics versus greed, but greed has
guts, imagination, and enormous ingenuity.
For: The Quint
(850 words)
April 4th 2016
Gautam Mukherjee
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