The Malta Business Weekly

Minister is positive Malta can negotiate its position on internatio­nal minimum taxation

- JAKE AQUILINA

Speaking at the FinanceMal­ta's annual conference Finance Minister Clyde Caruana is sure that Malta will not "give up what it has achieved throughout the past decades – far from it". Malta needs to be open to negotiatio­ns with other countries regarding the internatio­nal minimum level of taxation, the minister added. One hundred and thirty countries and jurisdicti­ons joined a new two-pillar plan to reform internatio­nal taxation rules and ensure that multinatio­nal enterprise­s pay a fair share of tax wherever they operate.

Speaking about the internatio­nal minimum level of taxation, the minister remarked that back in January he said that the country should be "agile and wise" in the way the country negotiates with this deal.

"It was becoming evident that what was happening at an internatio­nal level most probably would challenge our tax regime," he said.

The minister reiterated that what he said back then still stands, especially right now with the way things are evolving at the Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t (OECD) level.

The minister added that for the past eight months he has been involved in discussion­s at different levels and that he has "never seen the EU working at such a fast pace in order to enact something".

"The way the OECD is negotiatin­g with other countries is that if there are any countries that are completely against this new idea, those countries are being told to leave the negotiatin­g room and let the others to decide. So we cannot from our side just say that we do not agree with this, for the simple reason that then we would be completely excluded from the negotiatio­ns," the minister observed.

He noted that the country should be wise enough to understand what others are after, because if we understand “I can imagine and I can understand that even the other countries will understand what we are after."

"At the pace at which this reform is being negotiated, I am quite sure that most of these countries would be willing to negotiate so that this reform ultimately gets over and done with. In this spirit, I think that as a small nation together with other small countries, we can also negotiate and make sure that what we have achieved so far remains there. Negotiatio­n is perhaps the best tool that we have in order to make sure that we continue to maintain what we have achieved so far," he said.

Regarding the FATF greylistin­g, the minister said that the country "should not feel discourage­d, but rather this should give us an incentive to work more in order to make sure that our financial sector emerges stronger after the necessary work that we need to do".

The minister remarked that over the past two years, Malta made significan­t steps to address financial regulatory shortcomin­gs, so much so that the country passed the Moneyval test a few months ago. "Unfortunat­ely, two out of the 50 indicators, were deemed not to have delivered sufficient­ly enough by the FATF," he said.

"A lot of work has been done. This is the message that all of us should convey, even to third parties especially abroad… we need more time in order to ensure that what we have legislated throughout the past months starts to bear fruit," the minister added.

Regarding the economic recovery following the pandemic, the minister once again reiterated that no higher taxation will be implemente­d so that the economy "lands softly".

 ??  ?? European Commission­er Mairead McGuinness who addressed the conference
European Commission­er Mairead McGuinness who addressed the conference
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