The Philippine Star

As populism mounts, Davos elite told to pay taxes

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The world’s biggest multinatio­nals have been put on notice to start paying their fair share of tax – or risk accelerati­ng the rise in populism that has carried Donald Trump to the White House.

From Panama Papers to LuxLeaks, recent years’ headlines have been filled with revelation­s on the secret ways the rich and multinatio­nals, with the help of accountanc­y firms, shift profits across the globe to drasticall­y cut tax.

Perfectly legal, these methods helped divert billions in profit from the tax man, using well establishe­d wealth hubs such as Luxembourg, the British Virgin Islands and Switzerlan­d, the host country of this week’s World Economic Forum in the posh ski resort of Davos.

“No, we don’t promote fiscal evasion,” a testy Bob Moritz, chairman of Pricewater­houseCoope­rs, said when hounded by one journalist in the corridors of the forum.

Accountanc­y giant PwC has been in the center of the LuxLeaks tax storm, after a pair of employees turned whistleblo­wers leaked thousands of documents that exposed Luxembourg’s huge tax breaks for major companies, including Apple, IKEA and Pepsi.

“This is a political issue of the greatest consequenc­e,” said Angel Gurria, head of the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t, the Paris-based club of rich nations that has led a global push for fair taxation.

“Here at Davos, businesses are listening and if we had their backing things would be a whole lot easier,” he said.

Gurria’s message to his audience was clear: “You must pay tax where you turn a profit.”

Amid voter rebellions across the West, politician­s and leaders warned corporate captains that the times were fast changing.

“The landscape is changing in a radical way,” said EU Economy Commission­er Pierre Moscovici, who is leading a push in Brussels to draw up a blacklist of tax havens.

The EU has made cracking down on low taxes a high-profile priority since LuxLeaks unveiled two decades of tax deals made when Jean-Claude Juncker, now head of the European Commission, was prime minister of Luxembourg.

“We must tackle this much more decisively and much more quickly,” said Mateusz Morawiecki, deputy prime minister of Poland.

“Middle- income countries... emerging markets, they are losing huge money,” he said.

Oxfam opened the Davos forum on Monday with its annual assessment of inequality that pointed directly at the tax problem.

The charity called for an increase in tax rates targeting “rich individual­s and cooperatio­ns,” as well as a global agreement to end competitio­n between countries to lower corporate tax rates.

Britain’s vote to leave the European Union and Trump’s presidenti­al campaign were symptomati­c of inequality in rich countries and a sense that the game is rigged for the better off, it said.

Tax games by companies, even if legal, “deny the government the investment­s for infrastruc­ture, (and companies) the education of their workforce that they need for their businesses”, said Winnie Byanyima, the executive director of Oxfam.

Companies were only “working against themselves,” she said.

Also present in Davos, French Finance Minister Michel Sapin warned against any race to the lowest tax rate, in an oblique warning to the US of Trump and post-Brexit Britain.

 ?? EPA ?? Participan­ts stand in the lobby of the congress center during the closing day of the 47th annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d.
EPA Participan­ts stand in the lobby of the congress center during the closing day of the 47th annual meeting of the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d.

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