17/04/09 – Bermuda has signed 8 new tax information exchange agreements, with 7 Nordic economies – Denmark, Sweden, Finland, Greenland, Iceland, Norway and the Faroe Islands, and with New Zealand, bringing to 11 the number of such agreements it has entered into. It had previously signed agreements with Australia, the United Kingdom and the United States.
Bermuda was one of the first jurisdictions to commit to the international standards of transparency and exchange of information in May 2000, and one of 11 jurisdictions that contributed to the development of the Model Agreement on Exchange of Information in Tax Matters in 2002, on which the bilateral agreements with the Nordic economies are based. Since then it has been working to develop its network of exchange of information agreements.
The latest agreements mark a further acceleration in international efforts to implement the standards developed by the OECD’s Global Forum on Transparency and Exchange of Information, which brings together both OECD and non-OECD economies to review issues relating to the implementation of international standards in these areas. Over the last few weeks, a number of economies - including in Asia, Europe and Latin America, as well as the Caribbean - have announced plans to remove impediments to the exchange of bank information for tax purposes and to implement the international standards within specific time frames.
Commenting on the recent signings, Jeffrey Owens, Director of the OECD’s Centre for Tax Policy and Administration, said: “ Bermuda is an important financial centre that played a constructive role in developing the standards now endorsed by all major financial centres. I am very pleased that it has taken another significant step in implementing the standards. I know that it is determined to implement the standards fully and that other agreements will follow shortly.”
For further information journalists are invited to contact in Bermuda, Wayne Browne (tel +00 1441 295 5151) for the Nordic economies, Per-Olav Gjesti (tel + 47-22 24 44 72) or Torsten Fensby (tel: +33 6 78 25 12 89) for New Zealand, Robin Oliver ( tel:+ 64 48 90 61 13) or the OECD’s Media Division (tel: + 33 1 452 4 97 00).
Further information:
Visit the OECD's site on tax evasion - www.oecd.org/tax/evasion
Visit the OECD's site on tax - www.oecd.org/tax
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