The European Union will launch
plans Thursday (28 January) to stamp out tax avoidance by multi-national
corporations whose rock-bottom tax bills have provoked public outrage.
The plans are part of a
multi-pronged push by the European Commission, the EU's executive arm, to
combat tax avoidance, alongside investigations into the tax deals of major
groups such as Starbucks, McDonald's and Fiat.
It comes as Google agreed on
Friday to pay £130 million (€172 million) in back taxes to Britain after a
scathing government inquiry into the search giant's tax arrangements.
"Recent studies at the
European parliament estimate the revenue loss at around €50 to €70 billion a
year, roughly the equivalent of the GDP of Bulgaria," said Economics
Affairs Commissioner Pierre Moscovici during a news briefing.
"It is money that is
taken from our hospitals, schools, transport, security and other vital public
services," the former French finance minister added.
The European Commission said
major corporations whose business spans continents will now be obliged to
report profit country by country in an unprecedented break with the previous
practice of moving money across borders to save on tax.
Another requirement will
compel nations to agree on minimum standards for drawing up tax rules, so that
multinationals stop the practice of shopping around for loopholes to avoid
paying tax altogether.
"The days are numbered
for companies that excessively reduce their tax bills," Moscovici said,
adding that he hoped to finalise the proposals this year.
The 28 EU member states have
passed a number of measures since the LuxLeaks scandal in 2014 revealed that
top companies, including Pepsi and Ikea, had reduced their tax rates to as
little as one percent in sweetheart deals with Luxembourg.
The revelations, unearthed by
a group of investigative journalists, were a huge embarrassment to European
Commission head Jean-Claude Juncker, who served almost two decades as
Luxembourg's prime minister at the time of the deals.
The two main proposals are
part of a 15-point OECD package agreed by leaders at a G20 summit in Antalya,
Turkey in November.
The OECD calculates that
national governments lose $100-240 billion, or 4-10% of global tax revenues,
every year because of the tax-minimising schemes of multinationals.
Seven EU states are not part
of the OECD and the pressure will be huge for them not to block the proposal.
They are: Bulgaria, Latvia, Lithuania, Malta, Romania, Croatia and the frequent
tax avoidance destination Cyprus.
Separately, the OECD on
Wednesday said around 30 countries had signed an agreement to share information
on tax issues in a bid to stem fiscal evasion by multinational companies.
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