#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

Education

20 Feb, 2022

Muzaffarnagar, Uttar Pradesh

Village Backs Mohalla Classes

As all Mohalla Classes, the one in Bhaisani village too started with the sole aim to bridge the learning gap and to ensure that children, who lost two precious years of school, can be mainstreamed into formal schooling. Thirty children have been coming to the Mohalla Classes for the last two months. Of the 30, 19 are girls and 11 are boys. The Classes are continuing with regular school.
Read More

Education

18 Feb, 2022

Nalanda, Bihar

Making Students Computer Savvy

Oxfam India-HDFC stepped in with the installation of Smart Classes/Digital Learning Lab. Under this initiative, computers were installed to make government schools more computer-savvy; these were installed in three schools—Middle School in Indaut Village, Middle School in Rampur Village and the Senior Secondary School in Amar Village—in Nalanda District. Each Smart Class has six computers powered with solar energy. Computer teachers from local computer coaching centers were hired to train students and teacher; the trainers undertook a 52-hour course that were designed by the NIIT Foundation.
Read More

Women Livelihood

09 Feb, 2022

Nalanda, Bihar

Sangita’s Shop

With monetary support from the Oxfam India-HDFC initiative, Sangita Devi has enhanced and taken over the once part-time grocery shop from her husband and is now running it full time. She has added a cosmetics section and plans to do more in the days to come. She is earning INR 3000 every month from the shop.
Read More

Women Livelihood

03 Feb, 2022

Koraput, Odisha

For Vegetable Farmer Bati Hantal, Age Is Just A Number

Bati Hantal is one enthusiastic farmer. At 65 not only has she diversified her farming practices and increased her farm income, she is also an inspiration and a driving force for women farmers in her village, her SHG, and her Farmer Producer Group. The Oxfam India-SDMC Trust project, with support from NGOs WORD and Prastutee, was started in the Semiliguda and Pottangi blocks of Koraput in February 2021. The project aimed at strengthening 2000 economically vulnerable, and small and marginal women farmers from the tribal communities.
Read More

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