Khaleej Times

UAE says it will be off EU tax blacklist

- Issac John

dubai — The UAE expects to be taken off the European Union’s tax-haven blacklist after it meets criteria for transparen­cy set by the EU, the UAE government said on Thursday.

“We have committed to a reform process which will be finalised by October 2018, and we are absolutely confident this will ensure the UAE is swiftly removed from the list,” the government said in a statement.

On Tuesday, EU finance ministers adopted a blacklist of 17 jurisdicti­ons deemed to be tax havens, including the UAE and Bahrain, in a step to counter worldwide tax avoidance. Countries on the blacklist may no longer be used by EU institutio­ns for internatio­nal financial operations, and transactio­ns involving them could be subject to closer scrutiny. That could affect capital flows through the UAE, which is the Middle East’s main banking centre. The UAE government said it was surprised and disappoint­ed at being listed. —

dubai — The UAE expressed surprise and dismay over European Union’s decision to include the Emirates in a list of non-compliant tax jurisdicti­ons, and said it expects to be removed from the list swiftly.

“We have committed to a reform process which will be finalised by October 2018, and we are absolutely confident this will ensure the UAE is swiftly removed from the list,” the government said in a statement on Thursday.

On Tuesday, EU finance ministers adopted a blacklist of 17 jurisdicti­ons, including the UAE and Bahrain, deemed to be tax havens, following a year of negotiatio­ns, singling out countries that EU officials accuse of facilitati­ng the creating of shell companies and other structures designed to aid tax avoidance.

Yousef Haji Al Khouri, Undersecre­tary of the Ministry of Finance, said the UAE has worked to meet the EU’s requiremen­ts in terms of exchanging tax-related informatio­n.

We look forward to moving into the next phase of cooperatio­n with our EU partners on the important issue of tax regulation

Yousef Haji Al Khouri,

Undersecre­tary of the Ministry of Finance

“We look forward to moving into the next phase of cooperatio­n with our EU partners on the important issue of tax regulation.”

Al Khouri pointed out that the EU had acknowledg­ed that the UAE has addressed each issue that has been raised, and that the UAE has drafted, legislated significan­t reforms to ensure that they remain in “lock-step” with partner countries in the Organisati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t and internatio­nal best practice.

The only remaining issue in the case of the UAE is the implementa­tion of the BEPS (base erosion and profit shifting) minimum standard, which the UAE has committed to finalising in October 2018 and ratifying in March of the following year, giving the UAE’s federal structure the time necessary to ratify the measure across all seven emirates.

BEPS is an agreement signed by some OECD member countries to tackle tax avoidance strategies that allow multinatio­nal companies to shift profits artificial­ly to low or notax locations.

The statement said the UAE stand by “this realistic timeline,” adding that it was confident of being recognised as an internatio­nally compliant tax jurisdicti­on at the EU’s next review.

EU ambassador Patrizio Fondi said the placement in the list must not be seen as the end-game. “On the contrary, the exercise is ongoing and remains a matter of cooperatio­n between partners.”

According to reports, a further 47 countries on the blacklist may no longer be used by EU institutio­ns for internatio­nal financial operations, and transactio­ns involving them could be subject to closer scrutiny.

Gary Dugan, former chief investment officer of National Bank of Abu Dhabi, said the timing of the UAE being placed on the blacklist was surprising, as most banks in the Dubai Internatio­nal Financial Centre and in the onshore market had already cleaned up their books in the last few years.

“This will make some of the European private banks nervous, and might tighten their compliance even more to make sure they don’t get on the wrong side of a fine,” he was quoted as saying.

Central Bank of the UAE officials were not available on Thursday for comment on the developmen­t. The UAE Banks Federation officials were also not available for comments.

— issacjohn@khaleejtim­es.com

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