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While conceding the need for greater degrees of co-operation with onshore authorities, the offshore centres' tradition of protecting investors' privacy still persists. If they are implementing measures necessary to maintain a reputation for probity, on money-laundering for example, and if they are co-operative when there is evidence of criminal activity, they will nevertheless actively resist any attempts at 'fishing expeditions' on the part of onshore tax authorities.
It is this confidentiality, and an asset repository one step removed from mainstream life, that can protect those who are subject to a risk of litigation: business proprietors, doctors, lawyers and people perceived to have substantial net worth. In our increasingly litigious society, it is not always the person directly causing an actionable event that gets sued. Litigants, maybe even frivolously, are likely to pursue those with loose connections to the chain of events, because they are seen as having deep pockets. And with increasing compensation levels, liability insurance may be insufficient to cover an award. If assets are less clearly identifiable or easy to recover, this can deter such actions, or at least circumscribe losses.
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