The Phnom Penh Post

EU removes Switzerlan­d, UAE from tax-haven list

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THE EU removed Switzerlan­d and the UAE from its list of tax havens on Thursday, giving two global hubs for multinatio­nal tax schemes the all clear.

“Albania, Costa Rica, Mauritius, Serbia and Switzerlan­d have implemente­d ahead of their deadline all necessary reforms to comply with EU tax good governance principles,” the bloc’s 28 finance ministers said.

The EU’s grey list has included Switzerlan­d since its launch in December 2017 as the country was deemed as having inadequate tax rules, although it had expressed commitment to reform them.

“If Switzerlan­d is off this list, it is a success for me. The best list is the shortest,” said Pierre Moscovici, European Commission­er for Economic Affairs, at a press conference in Luxembourg.

Switzerlan­d had approved a tax reform in October last year, but its entry into force had been delayed due to a referendum.

The UAE, which includes Dubai, was also given a clean bill of health, lifted out directly from the blacklist after rushing through reforms.

“Today, the EU has whitewashe­d two of the world’s most harmful tax havens,” said Oxfam EU Policy Advisor on Tax Chiara Putaturo.

“Despite recent reforms, both countries will continue to offer sweet treats to tax-dodging companies, like very low tax rates, accelerati­ng the race to the bottom on corporate taxation.”

The move leaves only nine countries or territorie­s considered to be uncooperat­ive on the list – American Samoa, Belize, Fiji, Guam, Oman, Samoa, Trinidad and Tobago, the US Virgin Islands and Vanuatu.

The 28 EU finance ministers drew up the lists – that followed several scandals including Panama Papers and LuxLeaks – in the hopes of “naming and shaming” countries into better combating tax evasion by multinatio­nals and wealthy individual­s.

Blackliste­d countries face only limited sanctions, consisting of freezing them out of European aid or developmen­t funding.

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