zondag 13 maart 2016

ECOFIN reaches political agreement on CbCR

On 8 March 2016, the Council of the European Union (ECOFIN) reached a political agreement on the European Commission's proposal to implement country-by-country reporting (CbCR) to local tax administration, as well as the exchange of the reports between them.

The agreement is, however, still subject to the scrutiny of the UK parliament. This is a first step towards adoption of the European Commission's proposal, which was included in its Anti-Tax Avoidance Package published on 28 January 2016.
 
 
The agreement entails the mandatory exchange of tax-related financial information rules which will apply to multinational companies operating cross-border in the European Union. After the implementation, all Member States will have all the necessary financial information in order to protect their tax bases by addressing the companies that try to avoid paying their so-called 'fair share' of taxes in the country where their profits originate from.
 
 
The CbCR rules are seen as a necessary complement to the OECD guidelines on BEPS.

donderdag 18 februari 2016

Treaty shopping and BEPS action 6

Action 6 (Treaty Abuse) is a key element of the OECD's BEPS Project. Action 6 handles treaty abuse, and in particular, Treaty Shopping, which allegedly is one of the most important BEPS Action plan concerns.
What is the OECD trying to achieve?

Double taxation treaties are agreements between two countries that aim to eliminate the double taxation of income which would otherwise be taxable in both countries under their domestic tax rules. The OECD is concerned that multinational groups may be structuring transactions to take advantage of more favourable treaties (treaty shopping) and/or engaging in tax planning arrangements using treaties in such a way they may result in double non-taxation.
Treaty shopping, i.e., where a person in country A, which is not, in principle, eligible to benefit from a given tax treaty with country B, invests through an entity in country C to benefit from the treaty. More generally, Action 6 intends to prevent the granting of treaty benefits in inappropriate circumstances.

 

zaterdag 13 februari 2016

Launch of the Anti-Tax Avoidance Package

On 28 January 2016, the European Commission (EC) presented its Anti-Tax Avoidance Package (ATAP) that contains proposed measures to planning, boost tax transparency and create a level playing field for all businesses in the European Union.
 
ATAP consists of seven parts:
  • legislative proposals for an Anti-Tax Avoidance Directive (draft ATA Directive);
  • legislative proposals for an amendment to Directive 2011/16/EU to coordinate implementation of G20/OECD BEPS country-by-country reporting (CBCR) requirements;
  • a proposed 'EC Recommendation' to Member States on the implementation of G20/OECD BEPS recommendations on tax treaty abuse and on permanent establishments;
  • a general policy 'Communication' on the ATAP and the proposed way forward;
  • a general policy 'Communication' on an EU external strategy for effective taxation;
  • an EC Staff Working Document; and
  • a study on Aggressive Tax Planning.
Comments:
  1. The EC's new proposals to crack down on multinational companies avoiding paying tax in countries they earn their profits won't be enough to fight tax havens, according to NGOs. http://www.euractiv.com/section/euro-finance/news/eu-s-anti-tax-avoidance-package-likely-to-fail-say-ngos/
  2. Recommendations on amending tax treaties:
    ° ensure implementation of new PE definition
    ° advice on how to revise tax treaties against abuse
    ° focus on how to do it in EU law compliant way
  3. The proposal for an ATA Directive could be seen as a first step toward harmonization in the context of the fight against base erosion and profit shifting. The EC continues to favour the adoption of the CCCTB, despite its rejection by many member states.

maandag 1 februari 2016

31 Countries Signed MCAA To Boost Transparency In International Tax Matters

On 27 January 2016, 31 countries signed the Multilateral Competent Authority Agreement (MCAA), which will bring greater sharing of information in international tax matters. The MCCA provides for the automatic exchange of Country-by-Country reports, enabling tax administrations to obtain a complete understanding of how multinational enterprise operations are structured across the value chain, while ensuring the confidentiality of such information.

‘Country-by-Country reporting will have an immediate impact in boosting international co-operation on tax issues, by enhancing the transparency of multinational enterprises’ operations,’ said OECD Secretary-General Angel GurrĂ­a. ‘Under this multilateral agreement, information will be exchanged between tax administrations, giving them a single, global picture on the key indicators of multinational businesses. This is a much-needed tool towards the goal of ensuring that companies pay their fair share of tax, and would not have been possible without the BEPS Project.’
This agreement, which covers BEPS Action 13 (Transfer Pricing Documentation & Country-by-Country Reporting), requires large companies operating in multiple jurisdictions to “report to their country of residence specified information regarding each jurisdiction in which the group operates,” including “revenues, profits, income tax paid, stated capital, accumulated earnings, number of employees, and tangible assets.”

First exchanges will start in 2017-2018 on 2016 information, depending on local implementation of CbC reporting requirements. In case information fails to be exchanged, the Action 13 report provides for alternative filing so that the playing field is levelled – although again this will depend on how the OECD recommendations are implemented in each territory.


zaterdag 2 januari 2016

Tax rulings and fiscal state aid in the EU

Since June 2013, the European Commission started a sweeping crusade against tax rulings, alleging that companies have received state aid in form of tax relief through tax rulings.
 
"The main reason behind our state aid action is the realization that governments can distort competition in the Single Market not only by granting subsidies but also by offering sweetheart tax deals. In particular, the deals we have identified benefit only a handful of large multinationals that can put enticing investments and job opportunities on the negotiating table. Smaller companies cannot wield the same bargaining power."
 
February 3, 2015: EU Commission starts proceeding against Belgium's excess profit ruling system
February 25, 2015: "Unhappy Meal" report - EU/US trade unions call for action from EU Commission
May 26, 2015: Amazon introduced a new tax structure in the UK, Germany, Italy and Spain. The Commission said it "will consider changes to the group tax structure, but these changes going forward don't affect any advantages the company may have received in the past."
 
The Commission in October 2015 decided that tax rulings for Fiat in Luxembourg and Starbucks in the Netherlands granted illegal selective tax advantages to the companies in breach of EU state aid rules. The Commission also has ongoing in-depth state aid investigations into tax rulings concerning Apple in Ireland, Amazon in Luxembourg and Belgium's "excess profit" ruling system.
 
 

zaterdag 26 december 2015

2015 Global Tax Policy Trends

There is a global trend towards transparency in tax matters and, consequently, transparency may well be the watchword of 2015.

The impact of regulation continues to present a challenge for financial services providers globally. Since the global financial crisis, governments and regulators have been focusing their attention on altering, tightening and clarifying rules to increase confidence in the financial services industry, deter financial crime, provide greater tax transparency and increase tax revenue by reducing evasion. These measures however can have far reaching implications, with changes in one jurisdiction or economic area having the potential to present changes on a global basis. One of the best examples of this is FATCA.

A further challenge awaits financial institutions in the next initiative in global tax transparency - the Common Reporting Standard (CRS) - which comes into effect in January 2016 and is a global initiative compared to the US centric FATCA.

Initiatives seeking increased transparency between taxpayers and tax authorities derive their momentum from a number of factors that include development issues, ideas of fairness, government crackdowns on tax avoidance and advances in technology.

Future tax trends for 2016:

  • An increase in the number of disclosure facilities;
  • An increased focus on taxation by national tax authorities and international economic bodies, including increased investigations and improved sophistication in the use of data and systems.

zondag 20 december 2015

Follow-up Special Committee on Tax Rulings

The work of Parliament's Special Committee on Tax Rulings will be continued under a new mandate for six months, starting on 2 December.
 
The Conference of Presidents of political group leaders decided unanimously to create a special committee as a successor to the special committee on tax rulings (TAXE), which saw its final report adopted on Wednesday 25 November. In the resolution which went with the report, Parliament set out its ideas on how to make corporate taxes fairer across Europe and urged EU member states to agree on mandatory country-by-country reporting by multinationals of profits and taxes, a common consolidated corporate tax base, common definitions for tax terms and more transparency and accountability with regard to their national tax rulings for companies.
 
The Committee's work will focus on harmful corporate tax regimes and practices at European and international level.