For as long as taxes have been around, tax authorities have designed mechanisms to ensure the collection of payment, and taxpayers have devised mechanisms to minimise its burden in a neverending cat-and-mouse game. The figure of controlling beneficiary is one the latest updates in this endeavour.
Identifying the “real” owner or beneficiary of a corporation or trust has at times been tricky for authorities. There is a large diversity of strategies that allow the protection of anonymity of the final beneficiaries of a corporation, such as bearer shares, figures of indirect representation, and shell companies, to name just a few. While there may be legitimate reasons for the owners of a corporation to want to remain anonymous, there are many illegitimate reasons, including tax evasion, corruption, and money laundering.
Derived from recommendations 24 and 25 of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF), international transparency standards were established in 2003 for the identification of final beneficiaries. Different governments around the globe have reformed their tax laws accordingly, and Mexico is not an exception.
The essence of these standards is to oblige both public and private entities to safeguard and preserve relevant information, and to make it available to tax authorities (or any other relevant authority for that matter) if necessary.
In 2022, in direct response to the G20’s invitation, Mexico reformed its federal tax code (specifically with the addition of Articles 32-B Third, 32-B Fourth, and 32-B Fifth) ,and issued, through a miscellaneous tax resolution, guidelines and characteristics of the information that various public and private entities must keep. This has been colloquially referred to as “The Controlling Beneficiary File”.
For these purposes, the tax regulation defines the controlling beneficiary as the natural individual or group of natural individuals who:
Furthermore, tax regulation mandates the following entities to comply with all legal provisions regarding the controlling beneficiary:
Some, if not all, of the information that tax authorities require to store in the “Controlling Beneficiary File” is of a very sensitive nature. This will undoubtedly represent a challenge in (1) safeguarding information from third parties who may want to misuse it, and (2) determining the extent of the responsibility of the people who are legally obligated to safeguard the information.
The miscellaneous tax resolution establishes that the “Controlling Beneficiary File” must contain the following information:
All this information must be kept up to date since the tax authorities may require any of the aforementioned entities to deliver the “Controlling Beneficiary File” within 15 days of said requirement. Failing to comply with the authorities in a timely and accurate fashion may result in fines to the non- complying part for up to MXN 2 million.
The controlling beneficiary figure is one that undoubtedly will change the landscape in which businesses are structured and information is kept in Mexico. As Mexico complies with international standards, the hope for the future is for a lot more of transparency in business operations before the tax authorities, which, in turn, could represent a reduction in tax evasion, tax fraud, and money laundering.
This increase in transparency is part of a legal trend, which imposes an additional bureaucratic burden on corporations and increases potential liability in cases of non-compliance. While most countries tend to unite in their efforts, it is clear that specific requirements can vary greatly from one country to another, making it of paramount importance to have access to advice from someone with local expertise.
