Last month Mr Key said NZ could become the Switzerland of Asia-Pacific, attracting the mega-rich.
Last month Mr Key said NZ could become the Switzerland of Asia-Pacific, attracting the mega-rich.
Prime Minister John Key is defending his vision to model New Zealand on Jersey or Switzerland after New Zealand was caught up in a global tax haven scandal.
The leak of documents from Panama-based law firm Mossack Fonesca, known as the "Panama Papers", has led to increased scrutiny of NewZealand's tax-free foreign trusts, which are reported to hold hundreds of millions of dollars.
In response, Mr Key has rejected the "tax haven" tag, saying there is no secrecy about New Zealand's trusts regime.
But his past comments on tax havens have come into sharper focus as a result of the leak.
Mr Key has talked openly about the benefits of economies which are built on offshore trusts.
When he was National's finance spokesman in 2005, he talked about New Zealand becoming the "Jersey of the South Pacific" and his wish to develop the offshore banking industry.
Jersey, a tiny British Crown dependency off the coast of France, is a popular tax haven because its light taxes. Half of its economy comes from financial services.
Asked about the comments yesterday, Mr Key said there was no reason New Zealand could not develop an offshore banking system if it followed strict international rules on tax and compliance.
"I think there's a role for New Zealand to play in providing financial services. We ... have very strict obligations around disclosure and we meet those obligations."
New Zealand's disclosure regime for foreign trusts set it apart from the well-known island havens, he said.
In another interview with the Herald last month, Mr Key said New Zealand should position itself as an Asia-Pacific "Switzerland" and attract mega-rich consumers.
When the Panama Papers made global headlines on Monday, Mr Key was forced to defend his vision to model New Zealand on a country known for its secretive financial system and tax haven activity.
Labour's finance spokesman Grant Robertson raised Mr Key's past comments on tax havens in Parliament yesterday.
"That's not the economy that we want in New Zealand".
"We want an economy in which people aren't serving coffee to the 1 per cent, that we're actually making and building the things that will help people have a share in prosperity."