In the mid-1980s, the government began offering offshore registration to companies wishing to incorporate in the islands, and incorporation fees now generate an estimated 51.4% of Government revenues. As of 2019, it costs $450 to form a company with fewer than 50,000 shares and another $450 a year to maintain registration. According to official statistics 447,801 BVI companies were 'active' (i.e. incorporated and not yet struck-off, liquidated or dissolved) as at 30 June 2012. There are no recent official statistics on total numbers of incorporations (including struck, liquidated and dissolved companies) but these are estimated at 950,000. Many of these companies were originally formed under the
International Business Companies Act, 1984, but have now been consolidated into the
BVI Business Companies Act, 2004. In 2000,
KPMG were commissioned by the British Government to produce a report on the offshore financial industry generally, and the report indicated that nearly 45% of the offshore companies in the world were formed in the British Virgin Islands. The British Virgin Islands is now one of the
world's leading offshore financial centres, and boasts one of the highest incomes per capita in the Caribbean. In addition to basic company incorporations, the British Virgin Islands also forms limited partnerships and trusts (including signature "VISTA" trusts) but these have not proved to be as popular as companies. On 12 April 2007, the
Financial Times reported that the British Virgin Islands was the second largest source of
foreign direct investment in the world (behind
Hong Kong) with over US$123,000,000,000. Almost all of these sums are directly attributable to investment through the Territory's
offshore finance industry. In 2017, the total value of assets held in offshore companies in the British Virgin Islands was estimated at $1.5 trillion and two-fifths of company owners were based in Hong Kong and China, according to a report by
Capital Economics and commissioned by BVI Finance. The British Virgin Islands also promotes a number of regulated financial services products. The most important of these is the formation and regulation of
offshore investment funds. The Territory is also the second largest domicile for formation of offshore investment funds (behind the
Cayman Islands) with 2,422 licensed
open-ended funds as at 30 June 2012 Within the space of a few years, hundreds of such companies had been incorporated. This eventually came to the attention of the United States government, who unilaterally revoked the Treaty in 1981. In 1984, the British Virgin Islands, trying to recapture some of the lost offshore business, enacted a new form of companies legislation, the
International Business Companies Act, under which an
offshore company which was exempt from local taxes could be formed. The development was only a limited success until 1991, when the United States invaded
Panama to oust General
Manuel Noriega. At the time Panama was one of the largest providers of offshore financial services in the world, but the business fled subsequent the invasion, and the British Virgin Islands was one of the main beneficiaries. Moreover, in 1988, Panamanian law firm
Mossack Fonseca's founder
Ramón Fonseca Mora advised his clients to bring their business from Panama to the British Virgin Islands. ==Agriculture==