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UK’s Financial Transparency Move Is Crucial First Step Against Corruption

February 22nd, 2011

Christian Aid

LONDON – The UK government’s decision to back a ‘publish-what-you-pay’ standard for mining and other ‘extractive’ companies across the world is an exciting and welcome move which will challenge corruption in the oil, mining and gas sectors but does not go far enough to tackle the massive damage done by tax dodging and financial secrecy, Christian Aid says today.

Chancellor George Osborne is reported to have told fellow G20 finance ministers that the UK backs French President Nicolas Sarkozy on the introduction of rules requiring mining, oil and similar companies to publish details of their payments to governments in the countries where they operate.

But David McNair, Christian Aid’s Senior Adviser on Economic Justice, said that while the reform would be a welcome step forward, more radical changes are needed to combat tax dodging, corruption and other financial crimes across the world.

‘It’s exciting to see that UK ministers have accepted the benefits of requiring some firms to reveal far more about their financial dealings with governments,’ said Dr McNair.

‘Financial transparency makes it harder for businesses to use bribery in order to get deals on their terms with the governments of poor countries. It also helps citizens to hold their governments to account about what they are doing with the money they get from foreign companies.

‘But we need multinationals in every industry to be more transparent about their finances – tax dodging and corruption are not confined to the extractive industries.

‘Christian Aid is calling for the introduction of country-by-country reporting for all multinational companies, which would mean that they revealed their financial performance in every country where they operate.

‘We also need an end to the tax haven secrecy which allows companies and individuals to hide money – whether bribes, laundered money or untaxed profits and wealth, safe in the knowledge that their crimes will not be detected.’

Christian Aid is one of the organisations backing the End Tax Haven Secrecy campaign which was launched this month and which calls on Nicolas Sarkozy and other G20 leaders to use their November meeting in Cannes to put a stop to tax haven secrecy – see www.endtaxhavensecrecy.org

Christian Aid is also calling for the G20 to work towards the automatic sharing of tax-related information between governments. The Indian government said last week that it will be pressing the G20 on information exchange, because it realises that such information will help it catch up with tax dodgers.

Developing countries currently lose more to tax dodging than they receive in aid each year. Christian Aid estimates that tax dodging by unscrupulous companies trading internationally currently costs poor countries around $160 billion a year and deprives them of the revenues they need to fund schools, hospitals and other public services.

Christian Aid highlighted the need for greater financial transparency last week, in a story about alleged tax irregularities at a copper mining company which is a subsidiary of Swiss commodity giant Glencore:http://bit.ly/hwAN9J

To find out more about Christian Aid’s tax campaign, see http://www.christianaid.org.uk/ActNow/trace-the-tax/g20/index.aspx

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Contact:

Rachel Baird
+44 0207 523 2446
+44 07545 501 749
rbaird@christian-aid.org

Notes to Editors

1. Christian Aid works in some of the world’s poorest communities in nearly 50 countries. We act where the need is greatest, regardless of religion, helping people build the lives they deserve.

2. Christian Aid has a vision, an end to global poverty, and we believe that vision can become a reality. Our report, Poverty Over, explains what we believe needs to be done – and can be done – to end poverty.  Details at http://www.christianaid.org.uk/Images/poverty-over-report.pdf

3. Christian Aid is a member of the ACT Alliance, a global coalition of 100 churches and church-related organisations that work together inhumanitarian assistance and development. Further details at http://www.actalliance.org

4. Follow Christian Aid’s newswire on Twitter: http://twitter.com/caid_newswire

5. For more information about the work of Christian Aid visit www.christianaid.org.uk

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The Task Force on Financial Integrity and Economic Development addresses inequalities in the global financial system that penalize billions of people, and advocates for improved transparency and accountability.

Christian Aid is a coordinating committee member of the Task Force on Financial Integrity & Economic Development.

For additional information please visit http://www.financialtransparency.org

Written by Christian Aid

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