At a press conference on Tuesday, McLaughlin called for a level playing field in terms of financial transparency and stated that a standard without US participation “is not a global standard”, reports the Cayman Compass.
McLaughlin’s comments follow his attendance at the anti-corruption summit in London last week, which saw 40 countries come together to develop a global standard on the automatic exchange of beneficial ownership information.
Chilling effect
Although represented at the summit by secretary of state John Kerry, the US advised that it was not in a position to even sign the summit communique, which outlined the steps needed to combat corruption as agreed by attendees.
At the press conference, McLaughlin said the “temperature in the room fell about 10 degrees” when he pointed out that the fight against corruption would not work if the G20 nations, the US in particular, did not sign up.
The premier admitted that his comments were received with hostility, but it was an opportunity he could not pass up, reports Cayman News Service.
Hypocrisy
Cayman Islands’ financial services minister Wayne Panton criticised the hypocritical stance of the US in singling out overseas territories for a lack of transparency.
Referring to a 2008 comment by president Barrack Obama that a single address in the Cayman Islands “supposedly houses 12,000 corporations”, Panton pointed to the US state of Delaware where one address alone reportedly has 285,000 companies registered there.
He said that all of the companies registered in the UK crown dependencies and overseas territories, with the exception of the British Virgin Islands, would still be less than those registered at a single address in Delaware.
No mechanism yet
While the premier voiced his support for the initiative, he emphasised that Cayman has not agreed to a specific method for exchanging any information.
“For the record, Cayman has not agreed to implement a mechanism [to exchange beneficial ownership data]. Indeed, there is no mechanism to implement. It does not yet exist,” he said.
“What we have agreed to is to participate in the global discussion that will lead to the development of such a mechanism.”
Secrecy law repealed
The Cayman Islands announced last week that it will repeal its Confidential Relationships (Preservation) Law, commonly known as the ‘secrecy law’, by September 2016.
In addition, the government has passed legislation that completely abolishes the use of bearer shares, which can be used to conceal the identities of beneficial owners. Bearer shares were immobilised in 2000.