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Answer Overview

Response rates from 82.5k UK voters.

50%
Yes
50%
No
35%
Yes
41%
No
15%
Yes, as long as offshore income is reported
6%
No, too many wealthy citizens are abusing loopholes in offshore banking laws to evade taxes
3%
No, and neither should corporations and business organizations

Historical Support

Trend of support over time for each answer from 82.5k UK voters.

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Historical Importance

Trend of how important this issue is for 82.5k UK voters.

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Other Popular Answers

Unique answers from UK voters whose views went beyond the provided options.

 @96J75C3answered…2yrs2Y

 @9GFFFVGanswered…1yr1Y

Yes, as long as they hold citizenship in the country of the bank they wish to invest their money in.

 @974V27Wanswered…2yrs2Y

Yes, many important affluent citizens save or invest their money in offshore bank accounts

 @9PWDD5L answered…8mos8MO

Yes but thresholds should be introduced as to how much money one is allowed to invest offshore tax free

 @9PPH2NWanswered…8mos8MO

Yes as long as offshore savings and income are reported and income is taxed at UK levels (eg UK taxes income at the difference between UK rates and the country rate applicable to the account eg Cayman Islands).

 @9PH8J4Ranswered…9mos9MO

Ideally no, but it will be harder crackdown on it thus keeping taxes as low as possible is the only away to reduce it.

 @9P4KZ5Ranswered…9mos9MO

Offshore investments should be allowed however wealthy citizens found or suspected of using loopholes to evade tax should be stripped of their accounts and back dated in taxes