Ministers agree to propose joint list of tax havens and approve plan to automatically exchange data on shell company owners
EU finance ministers have approved a series of
measures to tackle tax-evading methods that were exposed by the Panama
Papers.
Speaking on the second day of talks in Amsterdam,
Jeroen Dijsselbloem, the finance minister of the Netherlands, which holds the EU’s rotating presidency, said: “The
sense of urgency is definitely much bigger.
“We’ve been [so] very busy competing with each other
... that big companies tend not to pay taxes.”
The 28 EU member states are “very committed to close
the gaps,” added Dijsselbloem, the president of the Eurogroup of eurozone
finance ministers.
Among the measures, the EU will propose a joint list
of tax havens to expose jurisdictions used by European individuals and
companies to evade or minimise tax.
Pierre Moscovici, the European economic affairs
commissioner, said: “There is unanimous support that Europe create its own list of tax havens by this summer.”
EU countries already have individual lists based on
differing criteria, which could make drawing up a unified register difficult.
The ministers also supported a proposal to
automatically exchange data in order to expose the real owners of shell
companies.
Britain, France, Germany, Italy and Spain unveiled the measure at the G20 talks in Washington DC earlier this month.
The French finance minister, Michel Sapin, said “there
is an assumed and converging willingness to fight any anonymous mechanisms”
that aid tax evasion and money laundering.
EU member states will begin talks next week on new
rules requiring big companies operating in Europe to make public what they earn
in each country, Dijsselbloem said.
Country-by-country reporting has long been a key demand of tax
activists, who accuse big
corporations of secretly shifting profits to low-tax jurisdictions, often
through the use of shell companies.
EU governments are divided on the proposal, with some
arguing that sensitive corporate data should remain exclusive to tax
authorities and not be made public.
Austria’s finance minister, Hans Jörg Schelling, said:
“I think we should not overshoot in tackling these things out of the hysteria
on Panama.”
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