Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Good afternoon to everyone.
My first question is for Mr. Montroy and the representatives from the Canada Revenue Agency who are accompanying him.
The last time that we met with officials from Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada, we talked at great length about tax havens and the fact that Panama was on the OECD grey list. We also asked questions about the fact that the Minister of International Trade had sent a letter to his Panamanian counterpart in order to establish a tax information exchange convention and that he had not yet received a response.
During the same time period, the government signed, in June 2010, tax information exchange agreements with eight countries. According to my information, two other countries have reportedly been added to the list. These countries include the Bahamas, Bermuda, Dominica, the Cayman Islands, the Turks and Caicos Islands, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, etc.
In the July 6, 2010 edition of the newspaper La Presse, a reporter wrote the following:
In exchange for these agreements, Canada appears to give an advantage to these jurisdictions. The subsidiaries of active Canadian businesses established in these islands could repatriate, tax free, their foreign profits to Canada. Hence Bermuda, like the Bahamas and the other islands, will obtain a status that is similar to that of Barbados, the only tax haven to have such a privilege. [Translation]
Could you comment on this issue and tell us whether or not this will be the same situation with Panama should we enter into a tax information exchange agreement with this country.