Crown dependencies to comply with EU tax regulation

Guernsey and Isle of Man join Jersey to avoid EU tax haven blacklist

Pension freedoms ‘concern’ Isle of Man providers

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All three Crown dependencies (Jersey, Guernsey and the Isle of Man) have co-operated with the Code of Conduct Group (CCG) to introduce similar legislation to avoid being ‘blacklisted’ by the European Union.

The EU’s CCG for Business Taxation recently introduced an additional criteria of ‘economic substance’, which states that financial centres should abolish regimes that facilitate offshore structures without a real economic activity.

Guernsey and the Isle of Man join Jersey, which started drafting the new legislation last week.

Evidence needed

The new measures will need to be finalised before 31 December 2018, when the EU will start its revision of the tax haven backlist.

Under the new criteria, companies based in the Crown dependencies will need to provide evidence that their activities are run in the territory, as well as being directed, managed and generating their core income in the dependencies.

Geoff Cook, chief executive of Jersey Finance, said: “We are confident that most companies within the scope of the draft law will readily be able to demonstrate that they meet the requirements.”