Arab Times

EU agrees clamp-down on aggressive tax planning

Ministers update list of tax havens, add Bahamas, delist Bahrain

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BRUSLS, March 13, (RTRS): European Union finance ministers agreed new measures on Tuesday to force accountant­s and banks to report aggressive tax schemes that help companies shift profits to low-tax countries.

Ministers also decided to add the Bahamas, the US Virgin Islands and Saint Kitts and Nevis to the bloc’s blacklist of tax havens, while Bahrain, the Marshall Islands and Saint Lucia were delisted.

Under the new rules, which were proposed by the European Commission in June, tax advisers including the Big Four accounting firms, banks and lawyers, would be required to inform authoritie­s about “potentiall­y aggressive tax planning arrangemen­ts” set up for their clients.

“It is a new progress for tax justice in the European Union,” EU tax commission­er Pierre Moscovici told ministers at the end of a public roundtable where all government­s agreed on the overhaul.

Reform

As part of the reform, informatio­n on harmful tax planning will be shared among the 28 EU states, in a bid to discourage the most aggressive tax avoidance schemes.

Once the new rules are finalised with the definitive approval of the European Parliament, tax advisers in the EU will risk fines if they do not report potentiall­y harmful crossborde­r tax schemes.

Penalties should be “effective, proportion­ate and dissuasive,” but EU states will maintain discretion in setting sanctions or fines at national level. EU government­s agreed on a compromise text put forward by the Bulgarian presidency of the EU, which slightly softened the original proposal made by the European Commission.

Cross-border tax arrangemen­ts set up with foreign jurisdicti­ons which have a zero, or “almost zero”, corporate rate would have to be reported, despite initial opposition by some government­s.

The Channel Islands, the Bahamas, Bahrain and the Cayman Islands are among the jurisdicti­ons who have no corporate income tax.

However, ministers scrapped a requiremen­t to report tax schemes with jurisdicti­ons that have a corporate rate “lower than 35 percent of the average statutory corporate tax rate in the Union,” which could have resulted in reporting obligation­s for arrangemen­ts with countries with a tax rate around 7 percent.

Some states opposed these requiremen­ts arguing that “would cause an administra­tive burden disproport­ionate to the objectives,” of the new rules, according to a working document prepared by Bulgarian officials.

Luxembourg, Malta and other smaller EU members have been among the most reluctant to introduce stricter rules to prevent tax avoidance, fearing they could harm competitiv­eness. But their finance ministers gave the green light to the Bulgarian compromise.

EU tax reforms require the unanimity of the 28 member states to be adopted.

Some members, including Britain, Ireland and Portugal, have already introduced penalties at national level for intermedia­ries helping set up aggressive tax schemes.

Ministers also formally added the Bahamas, the US Virgin Islands and Saint Kitts and Nevis to the EU list of tax havens, confirming earlier Reuters reports.

Caribbean islands hit by hurricanes last year were given more time to comply with EU tax transparen­cy standards when the bloc’s blacklist was establishe­d in December.

EU government­s also decided on Tuesday to include Anguilla, The British Virgin Islands, Dominica and Antigua and Barbuda to a so-called grey list of jurisdicti­ons which do not respect EU anti-tax avoidance standards but have committed to change their practices.

Simultaneo­usly, they moved Bahrain, the Marshall Islands and Saint Lucia from the blacklist to the grey watch list, after they committed to change their tax practices.

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