Not alone.
EPA/Ballesteros
Lionel Messi is not the first footballer to break financial laws and he probably won’t be the last.
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The basic difference is that avoidance is legal and evasion is not. But it’s not quite as simple as that.
Getting tough.
EPA/Olivier Hoslet
Measures to tackle aggressive tax avoidance and evasion have been talked about by the EU and UK for a while. It’s beginning to take effect.
What’s missing from the Panama Papers data drop is as important as what was leaked.
Reuters/Carlos Jasso
Authorities have been slow to respond to the tax revelations of the Panama Papers.
Standing on the sidelines.
Shutterstock/Andrew Bassett
Businesses are reducing the UK tax take with a new form of self-employment which harks back to mediaeval England.
Under pressure.
Stefan Rousseau/PA
Whether or not David Cameron’s association with an offshore fund was legal isn’t the point.
Moving offshore?
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We want a tax system that is structured fairly and for other people to pay what they are meant to. Determining what this is, though. is tricky.
No ink on these hands, see?
EPA/Daniel Dal Zennaro
Sweeping changes to employment law are of far greater concern than allegations that the Front National has been avoiding tax.
Middlemen like law firm Mossack Fonseca moved into a lucrative market for tax evasion.
Alejandro Bolivar/EPA
Proponents of tax havens would argue tax evasion may not be moral, but isn’t criminal. History suggests this is a slippery slope.
Katie Thebeau
Tax havens such as the Cayman Islands, Switzerland, the British Virgin Islands and Panama have a few key things in common.
Brazil is reeling from the political corruption scandal involving former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva (pictured on the fake bills) and members of the current government.
Reuters
The headlines are full of stories of corruption and mega scandals, but what does it mean for the rest of us? And what makes the economic cost of corruption so high?
Sigmundur Davíð Gunnlaugsson is refusing to resign.
Control Arms
Polls put the Pirate Party ahead of the already unpopular coalition, making new financial revelations particularly damaging.
Dennis Tang
World leaders are meeting in London next month to discuss corruption – what better opportunity to close tax loopholes?
The tax paid by some household names has been revealed.
AAP/NewZulu/Dinendra Haria
The ATO’s data dump of how much tax was paid by largest private companies raising more questions than it answers.
dolphfyn / Shutterstock.com
Why we shouldn’t be so quick to celebrate reports that Facebook is paying more tax.
Not convinced: Labor Senator and tax avoidance inquiry committee Chair Sam Dastyari says corporate tax cheats should be named and shamed by the tax office.
Nikki Short/AAP
Behind the corporations legally avoiding paying tax are the big four accounting firms, helping them avoid transparency.
Treasurer Scott Morrison says the changes to foreign investment scrutiny will give the ATO greater powers to crack down on tax avoidance.
AAP/Mick Tsikas
International investors will have to comply with new rules designed to stop tax avoidance by multinational companies.
Governments around the world are rewriting law to deal with tax avoidance by multinationals like Google.
Peter Power/Reuters
Global measures to crack down on tax avoidance by multinationals will take some time to deliver. And there’s still work to be done locally.
Headache inducing.
Paul Maguire via shutterstock.com
As millions of people file their tax returns, HMRC is struggling to come across as fair.
Subsistence fisherwomen in Vietnam, working on a beach owned by a luxury hotel.
Anna Childs
Oxfam’s report shows that as the gap between rich and poor grows, other inequalities are also on the rise.