I think it's worth bringing together the responses from NJ and OG.
NJ says (and I agree wholeheartedly) that corporate executives have a responsibility to shareholders to minimise their tax bills within the law.
OG suggests that offering a former minister a consultancy contract or non-exec directorship is bribery.
No, OG, it's not. At least not within the letter of the law. If the participants have an ounce of intelligence, there won't be any evidence to show that the decisions are related.
There is plausible deniability.
The reality is that this is how our government works. Why do you think politicians want to become ministers? It's largely because of the lucrative consultancy contracts that they (and the companies they run) can win because of the decision-making power that Ministerial office brings, and the fact that such power can be used with significant personal discretion.
If those decisions favour certain commercial interests, those commercial interests will want to reward the decision-maker.
That's how it works. If you dont believe me, look at the consultancy companies run and owned by former ministers and their clients (except you can't because that is a commercial secret). You can, however, look at the Non-exec directors of large companies. You will often find former ministers on the board. That route is used less nowadays, as non-exec directors have more responsibilities. It's no longer the gravy train it once was.
Nowadays, the former minister sets up a company, and that companynoffers consultancy services to clients that are not disclosed.
In law, it is entirely legitimate. But to me (and, if I interpret OG correctly) it stinks of corruption. The more lightweight the politician, the more open they are to this kind of behaviour.
Who controls the content of the laws? is it the politicians who stand to gain from this process.
As to the tax arrangements, we see government, directed by those same politicians, using EY, KPMG, Accenture and others as consultants to write tax laws. It's part of the privatisation process.
The individuals who help write those laws can offer their services to corporates as tax advisors.
It is not illegal for those external consultants to build in complex loopholes and then advise their corporate clients how to exploit those loopholes.
Again, it stinks of corruption, but there is no cime, as the laws are currently written.
This is the reality of how the UK government works today. It's been developing like this for decades.
As a result, all of them can claim they are behaving within the letter of the law. However, they are not within what the common person might term the spirit of the law.
As NJ will probably accept, that the law is only the letter of the law, according to how expert lawyers can interpret the text. There is no 'spirit' of the law.
It's my opinion that the laws and tax systems developed by the EU and the Council and the Commission are less corrupt than the system that has emerged in the UK over the last few decades.
The evidence shows (at least to me) that the Council and Commission are more resistant to this legalised corruption than our politicians.
I recognise that people may have other views. I'm not really seeking to change those views.
What I would like more than anything is for people to think about what all of this means, rather than taking the word (sometimes barefaced lies) of special interest groups.