Arab Times

EU mulls bill to penalise tax dodgers’ advisors

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BRUSSELS, June 10, (RTRS): Tax advisers in the European Union will be penalised for helping companies to set up schemes to cut their tax bills excessivel­y by shifting profits to low-tax countries, under a draft law seen by Reuters.

The measure, prepared by the EU executive, the European Commission, and still subject to changes, would force accounting firms such as Pricewater­houseCoope­rs(PwC), KPMG, Ernst & Young and Deloitte, banks and other tax advisers to inform authoritie­s about “potentiall­y aggressive tax planning arrangemen­ts” set up for their clients.

The move is part of a set of measures adopted by the European Union after last year’s Panama Papers and other revelation­s of widespread tax avoidance by wealthy individual­s and big firms through carefully constructe­d plans.

The draft law, expected to be published in June, dictates “effective, proportion­ate and dissuasive penalties” for non-compliance, but leaves EU states free to decide sanctions or fines at national level.

Tax advisers will have to disclose cross-border tax schemes deemed to be too “aggressive” to tax authoritie­s in the countries where they operate. The informatio­n should then be “automatica­lly” shared among EU countries’ administra­tions. This requiremen­t for an early warning is intended to discourage the transfer of corporate profits taxable in one EU state to other countries or jurisdicti­ons where they would be taxed at much lower rates.

If there is no intermedia­ry, or the tax adviser is located outside the EU, the obligation of disclosure would fall on the taxpayer using the arrangemen­t.

The draft law does not define “aggressive tax planning”, because any definition would risk being overtaken by everevolvi­ng avoidance schemes.

But a list of red flags, or “hallmarks”, will be drafted to spot arrangemen­ts that present “a strong indication of tax avoidance or abuse”, the draft law says. The list will be regularly updated by the European Commission. The Commission’s legislativ­e proposal will need the approval of the European Parliament and all EU states to become law.

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