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SCIAF

Scottish Catholic International Aid Fund

19 Park Circus
Glasgow
G3 6BE
Tel: 0141 354 5555
Email: sciaf@sciaf.org.uk
© SCIAF 2008

Registered Charity No: SC012302
Company No: SC197327
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UK must lead on Tax Justice

SCIAF's Advocacy Manager writes an open letter calling for the UK to press for fairer corporate tax laws

The letter was published in The Scotsman on Saturday 15th October

Whilst the Euro crisis is set to head the agenda at the G20 Finance Ministers’ meeting in France today, the Chancellor George Osborne and his colleagues have an opportunity to seize their wider responsibility to help some of the poorest people in the world.

The seismic events that have shaken the global economy over recent years demand that we reappraise the wider global financial system and the role that governments, corporations and financial institutions play in our world.

There are a number of areas that could be addressed immediately.

Introducing a small transactions tax on high end financial products such as derivatives could provide vital additional public funding at a time of severe fiscal restraint. A tiny ‘Robin Hood Tax’ of just 0.05% on these trades would provide over £250 billion every year, including £20 billion in the UK alone, to boost social spending here in the UK, tackle global poverty and support people facing the effects of climate change overseas.

The UK must also take a lead in pressing for European ‘country by country reporting’ legislation to ensure oil, gas and mining companies operating overseas declare what they pay developing country governments for access to the natural resources they profit from.

In Zambia, a country in which two-thirds of the population lives in poverty and life expectancy is 47 years, 70 per cent of exports come from copper mining but this generates just 10 per cent of national income. Country by country reporting would help to make sure that people in developing countries where EU companies operate see the benefits of their natural resources.

Thousands of SCIAF supporters across Scotland have signed cards and emails, adding their voices to our call for oil, mining and gas companies to ‘publish what they pay.’

This legislation would enable governments, civil society and share holders to see which companies are profiteering from poverty. A Robin Hood Tax would help the institutions which caused the financial crisis to begin making amends. Together, these two small shifts in international financial legislation could make a huge difference to people living in poverty around the world.

Patrick Grady is the Advocacy Manager for SCIAF.