OECD welcomes tax information exchange agreement between Antigua and Barbuda and Australia

02/02/2007 - Antigua and Barbuda and Australia have signed a bilateral agreement on the exchange of information for tax purposes, marking another step forward in international efforts to implement the principles of transparency and exchange of information for tax purposes on a global basis.

The agreement was the second such arrangement entered into by Antigua and Barbuda, which signed a similar accord in 2000 with the United States. It confirms Antigua and Barbuda’s commitment to high international standards, thereby reinforcing its stature as a responsible international financial centre.

Antigua and Barbuda became an important partner in the OECD’s initiative to improve transparency and exchange of information in tax matters in 2002, when it committed to work with OECD countries on developing these principles and to implement measures to support them.

Paolo Ciocca, Chairman of the OECD’s Committee on Fiscal Affairs and Co-Chair of the Global Forum, welcomed the agreement as reinforcing the growing trend toward greater transparency and international co-operation in tax matters. “I congratulate both parties for strengthening their bilateral relationship and for joining together to counter abuse of the financial system,” Mr. Ciocca said in a statement. “This is the first such agreement signed in 2007. I am confident that others will soon follow and that this is the start of a new phase in our work in which the principles we have developed are put into practice by all countries large and small.”

The OECD’s work in this area is designed to enable countries to fully and fairly enforce their tax laws (see progress reports issued in 200020012004 and 2006). A total of, 33 jurisdictions have committed to work with OECD countries under the auspices of the OECD’s Global Forum on Taxation to improve transparency and to establish effective information exchange for tax purposes. Many other countries and international organizations have also endorsed these principles. Current efforts are aimed at encouraging all countries to work towards the achievement of a global level playing by implementing high standards of transparency and exchange of information for tax purposes. A recent report “Tax co-operation: Towards a Level Playing Field – 2006 Assessment by the Global Forum on Taxation” indicates that most countries have made considerable progress in implementing the transparency and exchange of information standards that the Global Forum wishes to see achieved.

For further information, journalists are invited to contact: in Australia, Brad Emery (tel: + 612 62 77 73 60 ); in Antigua and Barbuda, Colin Murdoch; or in France, the OECD’s Media Relations Division (tel: + 33 1 452 4 80 90).

Top of page

Special Conference: 50th Anniversary of the OECD Model Tax Convention

Conference Web Site

Fighting Offshore Tax Evasion

Grace Perez-Navarro, deputy-director of OECD’s Centre for Tax Policy and Administration, addresses harmful tax practices, including tax havens, by improving transparency and establishing effective exchange of information.

Nicholas Bray speaks with Grace Perez-Navarro

www.itdweb.org

A joint initiative by the OECD, IMF and World Bank to facilitate discussion on tax matters

International Tax Dialogue