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Move to redefine
Bahamas as financial service center
Continued from home page.
Ms Warren denied that the move to compete with Europe on a larger stage
is related to the international anti-money laundering initiatives.
Last month, the Bahamas Government announced that its legislative review
would include all new laws passed to meet the OECD and other initiatives.
Much of the legislation is know your customer legislation,
and this is the second review to ensure future compliance,
Ms Warren said.
The Commonwealth of the Bahamas is an independent country, with a population
of about 300,000.
Tourism accounts for about 40 percent of GDP, employs about 50 percent
of the labour force and produces 70 percent of government tax revenue.
International banking is the second main industry after tourism. Almost
500 banks and trust companies operate from the Bahamas, of which about
40 percent maintain a physical presence.
The financial services sector accounts for about 18 percent of GDP and
employs about a quarter of the labour force.
International business companies, estate planning, captive insurance and
a ship registry are also important. The Bahamas banking industry
attracts business from South America and Canada.
Reconciling the Bahamas wide-open banking past with the present
mood of the regulatory agencies has required a fine balance.
The Bahamas is trying to put a history of acting as a staging point for
drugs and for laundering drug money behind it.
The Bahamas was one of the last Caribbean countries to be taken off the
OECD list, waiting until March this year before committing.
It made its promise to the OECD predicated on the establishment of a
level playing field for all financial centres conducting international
financial services activities.
The phrase level playing field was a code, adopted by many
of the Caribbean countries, for an understanding that the European countries
would adopt the same high standards as those that were forced on the smaller
nations.
The Bahamas has agreed to keep pace with developments adopted by OECD
and non-OECD centres, so ensuring preservation of the competitive status
of the island. No changes are proposed to the longstanding tax-free environment
for international business, including no income tax, no corporation tax,
no capital taxes and no withholding taxes, the same formula Bermuda offers.
The move to redefine the Bahamas as an onshore jurisdiction
is therefore seen as another step away from a chequered past.
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