"Offshore
companies are used primarily to facilitate international trade
and investment”
Types of Offshore Companies
Typically, our clients utilise the following types of offshore
companies to structure international business and for tax
planning:
• Very low or zero tax offshore companies incorporated
in jurisdictions often described as tax haven islands, such
as the differing types of offshore company that can be formed
in offshore company formation centres such as the BVI or
British Virgin Islands, Belize or the Seychelles or Brunei.
• Companies incorporated in jurisdictions which offer
both offshore companies and onshore companies and which
may benefit from favourable tax regulation and / or special
offshore company regimes. For example:
Mauritius has two types of company that are used for offshore
business and international tax planning. The Mauritius GBCII
Offshore Company pays zero tax and is effectively a tax
haven company, similar in many respects to a BVI Company,
whilst the Mauritius GBCI Company is tax resident and typically
utilised for double tax treaty and international tax planning.
Hong Kong, although not typically regarded as a tax haven,
has a favourable tax regime which effectively means that
correctly structured, managed and administered Hong Kong
companies can be utilised for undertaking offshore business
and international business without paying tax in Hong Kong
provided that any profits arising are not made in Hong Kong.
This type of tax regulation is known as "territorial
taxation".
• The LLC or Limited Liability Company and the LLP
or Limited Liability Partnership types of company.
These classes of company are used for offshore business,
international business and tax planning because they have
the advantage of limited liability but the flow-through
characteristics of a partnership for tax purposes. By this,
we mean that profits are divided among the members, in proportion
to their respective holdings, and are taxed in their hands.
In some circumstances, if all the members or partners are
non-tax-resident in the domicile of the LLC or LLP company
and no business is undertaken in that country, neither the
LLC or LLP company nor the members or partners will be subject
to tax in the company's country of establishment. Such companies
are said to be "fiscally transparent" and examples
include US LLCs, the Isle of Man LLC and the UK LP.
• Companies incorporated in the many onshore countries
which have tax regimes that are by statute tax advantageous
for specific international purposes.
The world of offshore business is more complex than the
black-and-white tax world inhabited by the media; offshore
business consists not only of tax havens but also of onshore
high tax countries competing fiercely to attract international
companies and individuals with all manner of tax planning
regulations and opportunities. These tax advantageous regulations
are used for a wide variety of tax planning business, such
as:
• Double tax treaty planning relating to dividends,
interest and royalty payments.
• The establishment of holding, international headquarter
treasury
and finance operations.
• Specialist business, for example, leasing.
• Personal and family wealth management and tax planning.
In fact, almost all countries offer tax regulations of one
kind or another to encourage inward investment.
International tax advisers have long been aware of the opportunities
which exist for improving overall tax efficiency by using
the special low tax regimes offered by high tax countries
seeking to encourage international business. However, successful
implementation of such structures is dependent on a wide
variety of issues, often relating to matters such as anti-avoidance
provisions, double tax avoidance, controlled foreign company
and management and control tests and provisions, transfer
pricing, thin capitalisation, participation exemptions,
capital gains tax and a myriad of other ever-changing tax
regulation matters. More recently, the weapons contained
in the armoury of the tax collectors have been supplemented
by exchange of information treaties and provisions.
So today the offshore world includes the expert implementation
of specific tax advantageous structures domiciled in high
tax onshore countries as diverse as the UK, Portugal, Singapore,
Greece, Belgium, Austria, Spain, Switzerland, Luxembourg
and the Netherlands.