Barbados Executive Summary: Barbados was mostly a sugar producer but the island has diversified into tourism, manufacturing (with a host of incentives), informatics and financial services. After a bad time in the 1980s, Barbados has grown well in the 1990s, although slowing down in 1998/99. The impact of 9/11 was moderately serious, with the economy contracting slightly in 2002, but rebounding between 2003 and 2008. In the wake of the global financial crises the economy contracted by 5.3% in 2009. It has seen slight growth of 0.3% and 1.8% in 2010 and 2011 respectively. Unemployment had been reduced from catastrophically high levels to less than 10% but a rise to 12% is estimated for 2012. In the last ten years the Government has been business-friendly and economically sound.
Barbados's Lowtax Specialisations
Barbados has preferred quality to quantity, and has developed a remarkably wide range of offshore formats to suit all tastes! A good US tax treaty and the Foreign Sales Corporation legislation (now repealed) have particularly encouraged US interest; Canada has also been a traditional partner. The offshore insurance sector is as big as the BVI's, and there are 57 offshore banks. Barbados is very picky about who it will have, and probably stands in better with the OECD than many OIFCs, although it is nervous about current developments. There is a stock exchange, fully computerised as from July 2000, with a central depositary; but mutual funds have not yet developed strongly. Barbados probably has a good shot at becoming an e-commerce centre if it plays the right cards - so far the Government doesn't seem sufficiently aware of this.
Lots of Taxes In Barbados!
Alongside a really large selection of corporate formats, Barbados has many different taxes. Although the introduction of VAT in 1997 got rid of eleven of them, there are plenty left, and for a resident individual rates are quite high. The structure of manufacturing and other incentives is complex, but properly used can reduce the tax burden substantially. It may be that fewer, simpler taxes would be beneficial; anyway, an offshore business will be able to avoid all taxation in one way or another
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