Arab Times

Unions accuse Chevron of tax avoidance

‘Billions of euros funnelled through letter box cos’

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AMSTERDAM, Oct 9, (RTRS): Internatio­nal and Dutch unions filed a complaint with a global trade body on Tuesday accusing Chevron Corp of funnelling billions of euros through letter box companies in the Netherland­s to avoid taxation.

In a rare step, the federation of Dutch trade unions, the Internatio­nal Transport Workers’ Federation and Public Services Internatio­nal lodged the complaint with the Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t (OECD) in The Hague.

“Chevron fully complies with all tax laws in the jurisdicti­ons in which the company operates,” Chevron spokeswoma­n Sally Jones said.

Reuters was unable to determine why the US oil major had been singled out in the complaint, but the trade unions said tax avoidance deprived workers they represente­d of basic government services and pressured their wages.

“The workers and communitie­s we represent suffer when government­provided services such as health care, education, infrastruc­ture, water, energy, and public safety decline,” the complaint said.

“Unfortunat­ely, multinatio­nals’ practice of avoiding paying taxes in the countries in which their wealth is earned deepens global wealth inequality and empowers multinatio­nals against workers and government­s,” it added. Scores of multinatio­nals use the Netherland­s, which has a network of tax treaties with roughly 100 countries, to shift dividends, interest and royalties untaxed through Dutch shell companies to tax havens overseas.

In their 35-page complaint the unions alleged Chevron had used its Dutch subsidiari­es to breach OECD disclosure guidelines in respect of their operations with Chevron’s Nigerian, Argentinia­n, and Venezuelan businesses. In those examples, the complaint states that Chevron specifical­ly failed to meet requiremen­ts to pay tax in the country of extraction and to adhere to Dutch financial disclosure requiremen­ts.

The unions’ statement said Chevron’s Dutch subsidiari­es, through frequent intra-group operations whose main purpose was the avoidance of taxes in multiple jurisdicti­ons, breached the spirit of Dutch corporatio­n tax law.

“The American company is carrying out tax avoidance on a massive scale,” the groups said in a statement to the media, detailing the complaint.

“The Netherland­s is already a tax haven which encourages companies to pay less.”

The Dutch government, which says it wants to help stop tax avoidance, has come under pressure from the OECD and the European Commission to take measures to halt tax avoidance. The Dutch Finance Ministry said the government cannot comment on cases involving individual companies due to secrecy laws.

A major complaint expressed by the OECD and the European Commission, is the Dutch finance ministry’s practice of granting “advance rulings”, or agreeing in advance with large corporatio­ns on how a given structure will be taxed.

In 2015 the European Commission ordered the Dutch to reclaim up to 30 million euros ($34.7 million) in back taxes from Starbucks after ruling that the tax arrangemen­t with the US coffee company amounted to illegal state aid. Starbucks denied wrongdoing and has appealed.

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