#MauritiusLeaks reveal Africa is losing crucial tax revenues to tax haven of Mauritius – Oxfam reaction

#MauritiusLeaks reveal Africa is losing crucial tax revenues to tax haven of Mauritius – Oxfam reaction

  • By Oxfam International
  • 23 Jul, 2019

Responding to research published by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists today that multinational corporations are using the tax haven of Mauritius to avoid paying millions of dollars of tax across Africa, Peter Kamalingin, Oxfam’s Pan Africa Director, said:
 
“Mauritius Leaks provide yet another example of how multinational corporations are gaming the system to shrink their tax bills – and cheating some of the world’s poorest countries out of the vital tax revenues they need to get children into school or ensure people can see a doctor when they are ill.”
 
“The true scandal is that this – like most tax avoidance schemes – is completely legal. Real political will is needed urgently to rewrite global tax rules and introduce a global minimum effective tax rate that is paid by all multinational corporations no matter where they are based. This would put a stop to the damaging tax competition between countries and remove the incentive for profit shifting – effectively putting tax havens like Mauritius out of business.

‘'African governments should revise their tax policies with Mauritius and other tax havens and defend their tax revenues better. Countries do not need to wait for global action, unilateral action is possible.’' 

Notes to editors: 

Mauritius Leaks revealed that multinational corporations artificially but legally shifted their profits out of African countries where they do business to the corporate tax haven of Mauritius, where foreign income like interest payments are taxed at the very low rate of 3 percent. Unfair tax agreements signed between Mauritius and countries in Africa and Europe allow some companies cut their tax bills even further.

Mauritius Leaks is a global investigation by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ). For more details see: https://www.icij.org/investigations/mauritius-leaks/
 
Since 2014, a huge number of documents, including the Panama Papers and Paradise Papers scandals, have been leaked by ICIJ unveiling how tax evasion and avoidance have become standard business practice across the globe.
 
Countries from across the globe, including several African countries, are currently participating in a round of international tax negotiations under the OECD-G20 umbrella, including issues such as the introduction of a global minimum effective tax rate. To effectively curb profit shifting, countries must ensure the global minimum effective tax rate is set at an ambitious level and applied at a country-by-country basis without exceptions.

In 2016, Oxfam exposed Mauritius as one the world’s 15 worst corporate tax havens in its report ‘Tax Battles.’ Download a copy of the report here.

On 28 May, 2019, the Tax Justice Network launched the Corporate Tax Haven Index (CTHI). Tax Justice Network Africa cited Mauritius as “among the most corrosive corporate tax havens against African countries”.
 
Company loans from Mauritius and nine other tax havens to African countries total over $80 billion. This means that for every $6 of foreign investment in Africa, $1 was a company loan from a tax haven. Two infographics detailing this information are available for download here.

Contact information: 

Anna Ratcliff in Oxford, England | anna.ratcliff@oxfaminternational.org | +44 7542 420 089

Annie Thériault in Lima, Peru | annie.theriault@oxfam.org | + 51 936 307 990 | @annietheri

For updates, please follow @Oxfam


Related Stories

Essential Services

13 Sep, 2023

Kalahandi, Odisha

Solar-based IRP: Providing Clean Drinking Water

A 2022 water test report showed high levels of iron (2.04mg/l was present as against the acceptable limit of 0.3mg/l). The hamlet in Deulsulia village, in Kalahandi’s Mohangiri gram panchayat, was in urgent need of clean drinking water. A solar-based iron removal plant (IRP) was set up. This 1000 litre community water filter was set up in March 2022 through Project Utthan, an Oxfam India-HDFC Bank initiative. 
Read More

Women Livelihood

29 Aug, 2023

Kalahandi, Odisha

Goat Rearing To Supplement Income

The group of 10 women received 15 goats of the Black Bengal Variety (14 female and 1 male) through Project Utthan, an Oxfam India-HDFC Bank project, in 2022. The women—all landless farmers—belong to the OBC and tribal communities. Apart from working as farm labourers, these women had no additional source of income. Goat rearing is an opportunity for them to become economically independent.
Read More

Women Livelihood

22 Aug, 2023

Nalanda, Bihar

Sprinklers For Nalanda Farmers Ushers Improved Yields

Sujanti and Vinod Kumar are farmers from Amar village in Harnaut Block in Bihar’s Nalanda District. The sprinkler irrigation system has significantly improved their crop yield and let to an improvement in their livelihood. Through Project Utthan—an Oxfam India-HDFC Bank CSR project—a sprinkler irrigation system was installed in Sujanti's field with support from the government's irrigation subsidy scheme.
Read More

Women Livelihood

21 Aug, 2023

Nalanda, Bihar

Vermicompost Pit | Our Gift To Mother Earth

Through Project Utthan, Oxfam India and HDFC Bank are working with 150 women farmers in 15 villages in three blocks of Nalanda District to produce vermicompost. Sanju Devi is one of them. She says, “the mango tree is our gift from earth, the vermin compost is our gift to earth to heal it and make it fertile”.
Read More

img Become an Oxfam Supporter, Sign Up Today One of the most trusted non-profit organisations in India