Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman.
It's a pleasure to be here. I can't say there are too many of my old colleagues around, but that's not surprising, since I last sat in the House in 1988.
I welcomed this opportunity because, first of all, I regard this as a very important committee, and I always have. And second, the issue of harmful tax competition and the use of offshore tax havens has grown steadily in importance over the last few decades.
I went to the OECD in 1996 as Secretary-General and it was at that time, effectively, that the G-7—I think it was still the G-7—became concerned about the illegal use of tax havens, as the OECD had been for some time. You can have legal uses of tax havens, as you all know. There is nothing wrong with having an offshore bank account, provided it's declared and transparent. But of course over the ensuing period we came to understand that there was a great deal of money that had been filtered into tax havens that were not cooperative in terms of either transparency or exchange of information and were hiding behind bank secrecy.
But really, I was surprised at how little action we were getting out of governments at that time, including the United States government, including the IRS and the Treasury, with which I met on several occasions, because there were some opponents to the OECD.
I should tell you that the OECD began the program with a misnomer, calling it “harmful tax competition”, which, as I recall, was the language actually used in the résumé from the G-7 at the Lyon summit. They used the term “harmful tax competition”.
Well of course that opened the door to those who like to charge the OECD as being a European-controlled organization where people like to pay a lot of tax, where the social contract is financed with taxpayers' dollars at exorbitant rates. They like to charge that the OECD—when it refers to tax competition—is really saying that everybody should pay the same tax. Well of course nothing could be further from the truth. I don't know if Jeffrey Owens testified on this point or not, but the OECD, from an economic point of view, had regarded competitive tax rates as being very healthy and that they could be very efficient. So the notion of competition in tax, which backfired in terms of the initial communications on this program, was corrected in 2000 and it became essentially “harmful tax practices”.
But the opponents of the OECD work continued, of course, to harp on the theme that it was really a European-dominated organization with a totally different view of the relationship between the individual and the state and the social contract, and that the OECD was set on creating uniformity in taxation all over the world. Some of the most outspoken critics were in the United States. The Heritage Foundation—the tax part of which was led at that time by a man called Dan Mitchell—frequently published in newspapers in the United States attacks on the OECD to the point where I had to go to Washington to meet with senatorial staff and senators to explain the program. Some of them were threatening to cut off funding to the OECD, which of course would have buried the OECD, since the United States contributes 25% of the budget. That's changed somewhat, but not very much. But at that time it was a statutory obligation that in the OECD they paid 25%. Even under the formula of contributions it would have been much more because of the size of the economy.
On the other hand, we had strong support from some senators, such as Senator John McCain and others, who realized how important this work was. And similarly, in most of the treasuries around the world they realized how important this work was.
In the last few years, in fact almost since my departure, there has been an acceleration of activity in the area. And I expect—since you heard from Jeffrey Owens—that he explained to you how the global tax forum, which we created in the year 2000, has grown in significance and grown in structure, if you like. At that time it was more of an informal gathering. We had numerous meetings, some of which I attended, but since then, as I understand it, it's become much more effective.
It has many more members, and the OECD, with pressure from the G-20, has been successful in bringing more and more countries into the transparency and exchange of information orbit. Now there are actually no blacklists. We had blacklists at that time of uncooperative jurisdictions, but my understanding is that those blacklists have now been eliminated. That does not mean that all countries are conforming to the tax information exchange agreements they've signed or committed to, but they've made the commitments. Now it's up to peer pressure and review by the committees that have been set up under the auspices of the OECD to ensure that there is compliance and that ultimately they adhere to these obligations they've undertaken.
I can't help but believe that whistleblowing has played a rather significant role in this. As you know, there have been at least three instances of whistleblowing. There has also been evidence of some major Swiss banks that have been involved with tax evasion exercises in the United States, and I suppose in Canada and other countries. Most recently, there was a chap from HSBC Private Bank in Geneva, where it takes $500,000 just to open an account, who went to France. You probably know this. He gave the French authorities the information he had on his computer, which involved some of 15,000 accounts, a fair number of which, about 10%, as a I recall, were Canadian. A very large number were French. I think the number was about 7,000 or something in that neighbourhood. Of course when you take out your pencil and do a bit of multiplication, you're beginning to realize that you're talking about big money. And this is only one bank. We're not talking about the other issues with respect to the UBS, which you've read about, and other jurisdictions.
So suddenly governments said that in this period, when we're all running deficits and fighting for every tax dollar, we have to basically come to grips with this problem. For me it's so fundamental, because what's happening is that you and I around this table are paying those people's taxes, which should be paid here in Canada.
Those are the few introductory remarks, Mr. Chairman, I'd like to make. I'm very pleased with the way this program has evolved. I'm very pleased that the OECD has continued to play such a significant role. And in fact I think this is why the OECD is at the G-20 meetings, because suddenly this has become a major issue for all of our treasuries.
Thank you.