All about: The 'Banks, The Inside Scoop, Their Dealings, Their Tax Avoidance'
Interesting Reads:
THE BUDENBERG AFFAIR
“WE want the banks to pay not just by the letter of the tax law, but by its spirit,” insisted George Osborne last week, announcing a new push to stop tax avoidance. So he won’t be too pleased to hear of the past antics of one of his lieutenants, Robin Budenberg.
[attachment=0:5xhhfu3b]robin_budenberg.jpg[/attachment:5xhhfu3b]
As chief executive of the UK Financial Investments arm of the Treasury, Budenberg is responsible for the taxpayer’s stakes in RBS, Lloyds Banking group and others. But he is also, it turns out, a fully signed up, big time tax avoider!
Jersey here we come
Back in 2003 Budenberg was a managing director of Swiss bank UBS when it hatched an audacious fiscal Great Escape, only now exposed in a tax tribunal, in which its 426 top bonus-earners in London would tunnel out of tax and national insurance bills on £100m worth of bonuses through a complex offshore arrangement.
The scheme – known within the bank as NECAP and planned with the help of tax avoidance specialists Ernst & Young – involved routing bonuses for bankers who were entitled to more than £20,000 for 2003 through Jersey trustees and an offshore nominee company, Lively Ltd, into another Jersey company called ESIP Ltd. Even UBS’s own officials admitted to the tribunal that it was “a tax avoidance scheme”.
A Freudian slip?
As a managing director Budenberg was almost certainly entitled to a much higher bonus than the average £235,000 or so. He was described in a recent book by welfare minister and ex-UBS banker Lord (David) Freud, Freud in the City, as “the most respected mainstream financier in the bank”. And Freud also reported that “for the senior bankers, hovering below managing director level, the [bonus] figures moved up from $1m to $1.6m [by 2000]… Certainly nothing I saw over the years made these figures look unrealistic”. ([size=5]Freud retired from UBS in December 2003 and that he was unaware of the scheme).
Which puts Budenberg in a tight spot. When he was exposed former UKFI chairman Glen Moreno last year as a trustee of the Liechtenstein Global Trust, home to many a tax dodger’s secret stash, the then shadow chancellor George Osborne pounced. “It was an error of judgement to have appointed someone who advised an offshore tax haven to look after the taxpayer’s stake in our banking system,” Quoted. Moreno, who at least hadn’t avoided his own tax bill, stepped down. What hope then for Budenberg, one of whose jobs is to enforce the clampdown on banking tax avoidance?
Comment