Peter Surtees

  • HOME
  • ABOUT ME
  • ARTICLES
  • CONTACT
Peter Surtees
Thursday, 15 January 2015 / Published in General, Income Tax, International

Tax information exchange agreement with the Cook Islands

The tax information exchange agreement between South Africa and the Cook Islands was signed on 25 October 2013 and published in the Government Gazette on 8 January 2015. Like most jurisdictions, South Africa has signed several such agreements in the past few years, invariably with tax havens, or financial services centres as they prefer to be known, of which the Cook Islands is the most recent. They are a substitute for full double tax agreements.

These agreements all have substantially similar provisions. The tax authorities must provide information to each other that is foreseeably relevant to the administration and enforcement of domestic tax laws, the collection of taxes and the prosecution of criminal tax matters. The significance of the “foreseeably relevant” requirement is that tax information exchange agreements should not be used for information fishing expeditions. The requesting authority must exhaust its own means of obtaining the requested information before resorting to the agreement. The parties must ensure that they have the authority under their domestic law to obtain the kind of information likely to be requested.

Sometimes a party may request permission to visit the other party to interview individuals and examine records.

South Africa has concluded and ratified tax information exchange agreements with Barbados, Belize, Costa Rica, Dominica, Lichtenstein, Samoa and Monaco, but to date only those with Barbados and Liechtenstein have been ratified by both parties.

Given the global push towards tax base erosion and profit shifting, which invariably involves tax havens, we can expect a continuing increase in the number of these arrangements.

Peter Surtees

January 2015

What you can read next

Recent binding private rulings
A lesson in interpreting legislation
Spur may deduct employee incentive scheme contribution

Recent Posts

  • Signing wills: comply with the Act

    In Delport v Le Roux and Others[1], the court’s...
  • Assistance to executors: beware the pitfalls

    On 22 March 2022 the Western Cape High Court de...
  • Purveyors case: voluntary disclosure programme

    “ The primary issue in this appeal is whe...
  • Estate duty: disposal in the course of, or during, liquidation?

    On 11 December 2020 the Johannesburg tax court ...
  • The rights of beneficiaries in a trust

    Based on judgments in the law reports, it seems...

Categories

  • Capital gains tax
  • Corporate restructuring rules
  • Deceased estates
  • Donations tax
  • Employment Tax Incentive Act
  • General
  • Income Tax
  • International
  • Interpretation of statutes
  • Non-executive directors
  • Tax Administration Act
  • Trading stock
  • Transfer duty
  • Trusts
  • Uncategorized
  • Value-added tax
  • Wills

Member of

Latest Articles

VIEW ALL
  • Signing wills: comply with the Act

    In Delport v Le Roux and Others[1], the court’s judgment, delivered on 24 November 2022, is a r...

© 2022. All rights reserved. Peter Surtees

TOP