Global Tax 50 2017: Maya Forstater
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Global Tax 50 2017: Maya Forstater

Maya Forstater

Maya Forstater is a new entry this year

Nobody quite digs into tax data like Maya Forstater. London-based Forstater has made it her mission to assemble and analyse data that provides a base for meaningful dialogue on tax trends through her blog and blog Twitter activity under the handle @MForstater.

"I became interested in tax because it is an area that seems to be stuck in a dysfunctional debate. Issues related to legal compliance such as tax evasion and illicit financial flows get mixed together with questions about how the international tax system works and whether it should be fundamentally reformed or incrementally improved," Forstater tells International Tax Review.

Currently, Forstater is a visiting fellow at the Centre for Global Development, and an adviser to The B Team, a non-profit organisation for sustainable business that brings together global leaders from business, civil society and government, founded by entrepreneur Richard Branson.

She tells ITR how the stakeholders in the tax debate, academics, policymakers, NGOs, tax professionals and the public, seem to be talking past one another and lack a common language and evidence-base for constructive debates.

"Many of the numbers that are most widely repeated are myths which tend to inflate the scale of the revenues at stake. Rough estimates can be a good starting point for shining a light on issues, but often these numbers are overhyped, or misunderstood. My blog has become a bit of a one-stop shop for checking these estimates and claims," she says.

As examples of unchecked figures dominating the headlines in many of the tax debates she cites examples such as: corporate tax avoidance being worth 'three times more than aid' to developing countries, Zambia losing $3 billion to corporate tax avoidance, corporate tax avoidance in Europe might be worth €1 trillion ($1.2 trillion), and that developing countries are losing $1 trillion a year in illicit financial flows 'mainly through corporate tax avoidance'.

"When inflated numbers are combined with high profile exposés such as the 'Paradise Papers' there is a danger of jumping to rash politically satisfying responses. The potential damage is not just to the reputation of corporations, celebrities and the tax profession, but to confidence and trust in the tax system and to the quality of public understanding and debate about public policy."

Proper analysis and understanding of data is needed to improve the debate on tax issues and to reinstate public trust, she says, otherwise "more data may just lead to more cycles of noise and outrage".

Looking ahead to 2018, Forstater says she has been working with The B Team on developing a platform for business leadership around responsible tax through dialogues between companies and campaigning organisations.

"These kinds of dialogues are emerging more and more – such as ones hosted by KPMG, by the think tank CiVi, and by the CBI working with Oxfam. I hope that they will lead to a new generation of tax debates which evolve from antagonism to constructive dialogue and the development of a common evidence-base," Forstater concludes.

The Global Tax 50 2017

View the full list and introduction

The top 10 • Ranked in order of influence

1. US Tax Reform Big 6

2. Dawn of the robots

3. The breakdown of global consensus

4. The fifth estate

5. Margrethe Vestager

6. Arun Jaitley

7. Sri Mulyani Indrawati

8. Pascal Saint-Amans and Achim Pross

9. Richard Murphy

10. Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi

The remaining 40 • In alphabetic order

Tomas Balco

Piet Battiau

Monica Bhatia

Blockchain

Rasmus Corlin Christensen

Seamus Coffey

Jeremy Corbyn

Rufino de la Rosa

Fabio De Masi

The Estonian presidency of the Council of the European Union

Maria Teresa Fabregas Fernandez

The fat tax

Maya Forstater

Babatunde Fowler

The GE/PwC outsourcing deal

The Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC)

International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ)

Meg Hillier

Chris Jordan

Wang Jun

James Karanja

Bruno Le Maire

John Pombe Joseph Magufuli

Cecilia Malmström

The Maltese presidency of the EU Council

Paige Marvel

Theresa May

Angela Merkel

Narendra Modi

Pierre Moscovici

The European Parliament Committee of Inquiry into Money Laundering, Tax Avoidance and Tax Evasion (PANA)

The Paris Agreement

Grace Perez-Navarro

Alexandra Readhead

Heather Self

TaxCOOP

Tax Justice Network

Donald Trump

United Nations Committee of Experts on International Cooperation in Tax Matters

WU Global Tax Policy Center

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