Weak regulations make Canada a money-launderer's playground, says report - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 03:46 AM | Calgary | -11.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Politics

Weak regulations make Canada a money-launderer's playground, says report

A new report by the C.D. Howe Institute castigates Ottawa and the provinces/territories for failing to tighten corporate disclosure rules, allowing Canada to become a haven for money-launderers and others intent on hiding dirty money. The report repeats demands made by other groups for a much tougher regime, including a central registry.

Report calls for central, publicly accessible registry to identify true owners of corporations

A new report by the C.D. Howe Institute says Canada's lax corporate disclosure rules make for a very attractive climate for money-launderers.

Canada's weak financial laws and regulations have made the country a prime destination for money launderers and others who want to hide the proceeds of crime, says a report being released today by the C.D. Howe Institute.

"Organized crime, tax evaders and money launderers don't stand still. Their dirty money flows on a path of least resistance to the safest harbour," author Denis Meunier writes.

"Canada is widely seen as a destination choice for funnelling the proceeds of crime."

A casino employee surveys bundles of $20 bills in a photograph released by the B.C. attorney general's office as an illustration of money laundering. (B.C. Ministry of Attorney General)

The report focuses on Canada's lax rules for registering corporations and trusts particularly the loose requirements onidentifying who really owns or benefits from those corporations and trusts, known as "beneficial ownership" information.

The report says that the country's federal system has created a patchwork which often allows someone looking to register a corporation to pick a provincial jurisdiction with the lowest bar on disclosure.

As a result, bad actors can effectively hide the identities of their real owners and funnel dirty money often mixed with legitimate funds into Canada's financial system.

"[W]ith professional know-how, complex structures can be created in Canada, or offshore, that will slow down or stop any intrepid investigator trying to connect the dirty money to the beneficial owner," Meunier writes.

Corporation rules weaker than for ordinary Canadians

Canada's rules for identifying the shadowy owners of shady corporations are much weaker than the rules imposed on ordinary citizens every day.

Applications for birth certificates, vehicle registrations, land registrations, personal bank accounts even library cards often require more identifying information than the rules governing corporations do, says the report.

Repeating criticisms previously levelled by groups such as Transparency International, Meuniernotes that Canada's weak system places the onus on financial institutions such as banks to provide ownership information,rather than on corporations themselves.

And Canada's regulations exempt real-estate brokers and others from identifying the owners of property, increasing the riskof money-laundering in hot housing markets such as Toronto and Vancouver.

The report calls for the creation of a central, publicly accessible corporate registry that contains information about the true ownership of corporations along the lines of what Britain established in 2016 and other European countries will soon require. It says Ottawa and the provinces need to harmonize their laws and regulations to make the registry a one-stop search tool.

Meunier says corporations themselves must be forced to divulge ownership information through the threatof hefty financial or even criminal penalties, and the regime must be expanded to cover real-estate developers, accountants, casinos and dealers in precious metals and stones.

The report cites estimates of between $5 billion and $100 billion in dirty money being laundered under Canada's lax regime, despite at least 15 years' of repeated commitments from the Canadian government to close the gap. Those commitments include the spring federal budget, which promised to tighten rules around trusts starting in 2021.

The federal Department of Finance has said it's been working with the provinces and territories since at least December 2017 to tighten disclosure rules, noting that fewer than 10 per cent of Canada's corporations are registered at the federal level.