I would like to pursue this matter further because although I am not an expert on the subject either, I am nonetheless convinced that companies use tax havens purely for taxation purposes. That seems rather obvious to me.
To answer your question about other international centres and why most Canadian companies use Barbados, I would have to say that the main reason is the tax treaty that Canada has signed with Barbados which allows Canadian companies to transfer home to Canada tax free any profits made in Barbados. Obviously a company will not use a tax haven that does not have a treaty with Canada because it would not be able to transfer home tax free any profits made.
Earlier, I asked if the main reason was not purely tax related. Let me put it another way, to help the committee understand the issue at hand.
Some Canadian companies are setting up legal entities in Barbados. We are talking about corporate entities, not actual places of business. These companies do not have employees working for them, no decisions are actually made. Corporations are created and business is transacted in various countries around the world, for example, in South America or Latin America. The corporations earn profits and after paying a tax of one or two per cent in Barbados, they transfer the profits home to Canada, where these profits are tax exempt because of the tax treaty in place.
If the Canadian government were to tell these same corporations that, instead of this arrangement, it was prepared to offer them the same rate of taxation as Barbados, namely 1% or 2%, while the rest of their operations would not be taxed, do you think that even one company would continue to use Barbados and to contend with all of these problems? Would even one company be willing to continue doing this?