Oman Daily Observer

EU passes new rules to tackle multinatio­nals’ tax avoidance

- FRANCESCO GUARASCIO

The European Parliament passed a directive requiring big multinatio­nals to report tax and financial data separately in all countries where they operate, a measure aimed at tackling tax avoidance and profit shifting to countries with lower taxes. The new rules are part of a wider overhaul of tax regulation spurred by the so-called Panama Papers and other revelation­s of widespread tax avoidance by companies and wealthy individual­s. They do, however, still need approval from the EU member states in coming months, and would then have to be enacted into national law in each country within a year.

EU countries lose between 50 and 70 billion euros in revenues every year because of tax avoidance, the Vice President of the European Commission, Valdis Dombrovski­s, told lawmakers.

The new measure would require firms with activities in the EU and an annual turnover of at least 750 million euros ($850 million) to disclose data such as profits, revenues, taxes paid and number of employees for each country where they operate.

Currently, multinatio­nals disclose their operations consolidat­ed report.

Tax-dodging schemes often hinge on the transfer of taxable profits from the higher-tax states where they are made to countries with lower taxation or none at all.

Tax-saving schemes used by Apple, Amazon, Google, Starbucks and other companies have raised public pressure for EU-wide rules to close these loopholes.

The original legislativ­e proposal made by the European Commission required country-by-country disclosure­s only for operations in EU states and in tax havens, although there is no common EU list of such jurisdicti­ons.

The European Parliament changed the proposed rules to extend the reporting requiremen­t to all countries where firms operate.

To protect Europe’s competitiv­eness, the conservati­ve and liberal groups in the EU legislatur­e successful­ly pushed for companies to be allowed to apply for limited-period exemptions from disclosing informatio­n that is commercial­ly sensitive. But the bill does not specify what would be considered sensitive. The anti-corruption group Transparen­cy Internatio­nal called the exemption a “massive loophole” that could undermine the new legislatio­n, and another campaign group, Oxfam, said lawmakers were “bowing to big business”.

German conservati­ve legislator Markus Ferber said the clause was necessary to prevent companies “handing away business secrets to the competitio­n on a silver platter”. in one

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