Procedure completed
Role | Committee | Rapporteur | Shadows |
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Opinion | CONT | STAES Bart (Verts/ALE) | |
Opinion | DEVE | JOLY Eva (Verts/ALE) | |
Lead | ECON | KLEVA KEKUŠ Mojca (S&D) | PIETIKÄINEN Sirpa (PPE), SKYLAKAKIS Theodoros (ALDE), EICKHOUT Bas (Verts/ALE), STREJČEK Ivo (ECR), HÄNDEL Thomas (GUE/NGL) |
Opinion | JURI | ||
Opinion | LIBE |
Legal Basis RoP 052
Activites
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2013/05/21
Results of vote in Parliament
- Results of vote in Parliament
- Debate in Parliament
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T7-0205/2013
summary
The European Parliament adopted a resolution on the fight against tax fraud, tax evasion and tax havens in response to the Commission Communication on an Action plan to strengthen the fight against tax fraud and tax evasion. Recalling that an estimated EUR 1 trillion of potential tax revenue is lost to tax fraud, tax evasion, tax avoidance and aggressive tax planning every year in the EU, representing an approximate cost of EUR 2000 for every European citizen each year, Parliament welcomes the Commission's initiative to establish a ‘Platform for Tax Good Governance’, and insists that Member States apply measures regarding issues of tax fraud, tax evasion, tax avoidance, aggressive tax planning and tax havens in their dependent territories. In the light of information on secret off-shore bank accounts published in April 2013 by the International Consortium of investigative journalism, the resolution calls once more for a strengthened European and international commitment to transparency that should result in an international, binding, multilateral, agreement on the automatic exchange of information in tax matters. Headline target – addressing the tax gap: Parliament calls on Member States to commit to an ambitious but realistic target of at least halving the tax gap by 2020 and asks the Commission to develop a comprehensive strategy, based on concrete legislative actions. It acknowledges, furthermore, that broadening already existing tax bases, rather than increasing tax rates or introducing new taxes, could generate further incomes for Member States. At the forefront of the EU tax gap strategy should be the following actions: 1) On tax fraud and tax evasion: Member States should allocate adequate staff and budget resources to their national tax administrations and tax audit staff. Members suggest that competent authorities should take action and suspend or revoke the banking licenses of financial institutions and financial advisors if they assist in tax fraud by offering products or services to customers enabling them to evade taxes or refuse to cooperate with tax authorities. They also stress the importance of a Common Consolidated Corporate Tax Base (CCCTB) and of implementing new strategies for improved combating of VAT fraud, especially carousel fraud. Member States are asked to: · remove all obstacles in national law that hinder cooperation and exchanges of tax information with the EU institutions and within the Member States, while also ensuring effective protection of taxpayers’ data; · continue, under the new Fiscalis 2020 programme, the simultaneous controls to find and fight cross-border tax fraud, and to facilitate the presence of foreign officials in the offices of tax administrations and during administrative enquiries; · seek ‘smoking gun’ data on tax evasion from other government-maintained registers, such as databases on motor vehicles, land, yachts and other assets and to share this with other Member States and the Commission. Parliament also calls on the Commission to: · introduce proposals for a harmonised tackling of tax fraud under criminal law, in particular as regards cross border and mutual investigations; · enhance its cooperation with other EU law enforcement bodies, in particular authorities responsible for anti-money laundering, justice and social security; · take immediate action with regard to the transparency of companies’ tax payments by obliging all multinational companies to publish a simple, single figure for the amount of tax paid in each Member State in which they operate; · address specifically the problem of hybrid mismatches between the different tax systems used in Member States. 2) Tax avoidance and aggressive tax planning: Member States are asked, as a matter of priority, to adopt the amended Savings Tax Directive and improve the effectiveness of the Code of Conduct for business taxation by raising issues at Council level where political decisions are urgently needed. Members also feel it is essential that the Commission implement country-by-country reporting for cross-border companies in all sectors, requiring disclosure of information on the trading of a group as a whole in order to monitor if proper transfer pricing rules are respected. The Commission is asked to take action on companies’ aggressive tax planning units, in particular in the financial services sector. Parliament also recommends: · preparation of a new Code of Conduct for auditors and advisers; · creation of an EU tax identification number (TIN), applicable to all legal and natural persons engaged in cross-border transactions; · creation of a European taxpayer’s code; · establishing efficient revenue-collecting mechanisms and the use of modern technology; · the swift implementation by Member States of the Commission’s proposal for the introduction of a General Anti-Abuse Rule and the inclusion of a clause in their Double Taxation Conventions; · introducing a European register for trusts and other “secrecy” entities as a prerequisite for dealing with tax avoidance. 3) Tax havens: Parliament calls for a common EU approach towards tax havens and welcomes the Commission's commitment to promoting the automatic exchange of information as the future European and international standard for transparency and exchange of information in tax matters. The Commission is asked to: · adopt a clear definition and a common set of criteria to identify tax havens, as well as appropriate measures applying to identified jurisdictions, for implementation by 31 December 2014. This definition should be based on the OECD standards of transparency and exchange of information as well as on the Code of Conduct principles and criteria; · compile a public European blacklist of tax havens by 31 December 2014. In this context, the competent authorities are asked to: (i) suspend or terminate existing Double Tax Conventions with jurisdictions that are on the blacklist, and to initiate Double Tax Conventions with jurisdictions that cease to be tax havens; (ii) prohibit access to EU public procurement of goods and services and refuse to grant state aid to companies based in blacklisted jurisdictions; (iii) introduce a special levy on all transactions to or from blacklisted jurisdictions. Parliament also encourages Member States to offer cooperation and assistance to developing countries that are not tax havens, helping them to tackle tax fraud and tax avoidance effectively, in particular through capacity-building measures. It recalls that transfer pricing resulting in tax avoidance negatively affects the budgets of developing countries by forcing on them an estimated loss of circa EUR 125 billion in tax revenues annually, almost twice the amount they receive in international aid. 4) EU role in the international arena: the resolution emphasises that the EU should take the leading role in discussions on the fight against tax fraud, tax avoidance and tax havens in the OECD, the Global Forum on Transparency and Exchange of information for Tax Purposes, the G20, the G8 and other relevant multinational fora. Members welcome the US Foreign Account Tax compliance Act (FATCA) as a first step towards an automatic exchange of information between the EU and the US to fight trans-border tax fraud and tax evasion. Parliament regrets, however, that a bilateral/intergovernmental approach has been taken in the negotiations with the US rather than a common EU negotiating position. Parliament considers that it of paramount importance that Member States authorise the Commission to negotiate tax agreements with third countries on behalf of the EU instead of continuing with the practice of bilateral negotiations. The Commission and Member States should insist, in their respective relations with third countries, on the strict application of EU standards in tax related matters, in particular as regards future bilateral or multilateral trade agreements.
- #3238
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2013/05/14
Council Meeting
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2013/05/03
Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading
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A7-0162/2013
summary
The Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs adopted the own-initiative report by Mojca KLEVA KEKUŠ (S&D, SI) on the fight against tax fraud, tax evasion and tax havens in response to the Commission Communication on an Action plan to strengthen the fight against tax fraud and tax evasion. The Committee on Development, exercising its powers as an associated committee in accordance with Rule 50 of the Parliament’s Rules of Procedure, has also been consulted for an opinion on the report. Recalling that an estimated EUR 1 trillion of potential tax revenue is lost to tax fraud, tax evasion, tax avoidance and aggressive tax planning every year in the EU, representing an approximate cost of EUR 2000 for every European citizen each year, the report welcomes the Commission’s Action Plan and its recommendations urging Member States to take immediate and coordinated action against tax havens and aggressive tax planning. Headline target – addressing the tax gap: the report calls on Member States to commit to an ambitious but realistic target of at least halving the tax gap by 2020. It acknowledges, furthermore, that broadening already existing tax bases, rather than increasing tax rates or introducing new taxes, could generate further incomes for Member States. Proposals on attaining the headline target: 1) On tax fraud and tax evasion: Member States should allocate adequate staff and budget resources to their national tax administrations and tax audit staff. Members suggest that competent authorities should take action and suspend or revoke the banking licenses of financial institutions and financial advisors if they assist in tax fraud by offering products or services to customers enabling them to evade taxes or refuse to cooperate with tax authorities. They also stress the importance of a Common Consolidated Corporate Tax Base (CCCTB) and of implementing new strategies for improved combating of VAT fraud, especially carousel fraud. Member States are asked to: · remove all obstacles in national law that hinder cooperation and exchanges of tax information with the EU institutions and within the Member States, while also ensuring effective protection of taxpayers’ data; · continue, under the new Fiscalis 2020 programme, the simultaneous controls to find and fight cross-border tax fraud, and to facilitate the presence of foreign officials in the offices of tax administrations and during administrative enquiries; · seek ‘smoking gun’ data on tax evasion from other government-maintained registers, and to share this with other Member States and the Commission. The report also calls on the Commission to: · introduce proposals for a harmonised tackling of tax fraud under criminal law, in particular as regards cross border and mutual investigations; · enhance its cooperation with other EU law enforcement bodies, in particular authorities responsible for anti-money laundering, justice and social security; · take immediate action with regard to the transparency of companies’ tax payments by obliging all multinational companies to publish a simple, single figure for the amount of tax paid in each Member State in which they operate. 2) Tax avoidance and aggressive tax planning: Member States are asked, as a matter of priority, to adopt the amended Savings Tax Directive and improve the effectiveness of the Code of Conduct for business taxation by raising issues at Council level where political decisions are urgently needed. Members also feel it is essential to introduce requirements on country-by-country reporting for cross-border companies in order to fight tax evasion. They call on the Commission to implement country-by-country reporting for cross-border companies in all sectors, requiring disclosure of information on the trading of a group as a whole in order to monitor if proper transfer pricing rules are respected. The Commission is asked to take action on companies’ aggressive tax planning units, in particular in the financial services sector. The report also recommends: · preparation of a new Code of Conduct for auditors and advisers; · creation of an EU tax identification number (TIN), applicable to all legal and natural persons engaged in cross-border transactions; · creation of a European taxpayer’s code; · establishing efficient revenue-collecting mechanisms and the use of modern technology; · the swift implementation by Member States of the Commission’s proposal for the introduction of a General Anti-Abuse Rule and the inclusion of a clause in their Double Taxation Conventions; · introducing a European register for trusts and other “secrecy” entities as a prerequisite for dealing with tax avoidance. 3) Tax havens: the report calls for a common EU approach towards tax havens. To ensure the effectiveness of such an approach, Members ask the Commission to: · adopt a clear definition and a common set of criteria to identify tax havens, as well as appropriate measures applying to identified jurisdictions, for implementation by 31 December 2014. This definition should be based on the OECD standards of transparency and exchange of information as well as on the Code of Conduct principles and criteria; · compile a public European blacklist of tax havens by 31 December 2014. In this context, the competent authorities are asked to: (i) suspend or terminate existing Double Tax Conventions with jurisdictions that are on the blacklist, and to initiate Double Tax Conventions with jurisdictions that cease to be tax havens; (ii) prohibit access to EU public procurement of goods and services and refuse to grant state aid to companies based in blacklisted jurisdictions. The report encourages Member States to offer cooperation and assistance to developing countries that are not tax havens, helping them to tackle tax fraud and tax avoidance effectively, in particular through capacity-building measures. 4) EU role in the international arena: the report emphasises that the EU should take the leading role in discussions on the fight against tax fraud, tax avoidance and tax havens in the OECD, the Global Forum on Transparency and Exchange of information for Tax Purposes, the G20, the G8 and other relevant multinational for a. Lastly, in the light of information on secret off-shore bank accounts published in April 2013 by the International Consortium of investigative journalism, Members call once more for a strengthened European and international commitment to transparency that should result in an international, binding, multilateral, agreement on the automatic exchange of information in tax matters.
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A7-0162/2013
summary
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2013/04/24
Vote in committee, 1st reading/single reading
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2013/04/18
Committee referral announced in Parliament, 1st reading/single reading
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2012/12/06
Non-legislative basic document published
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COM(2012)0722
summary
PURPOSE : to propose an Action Plan to strengthen the fight against tax fraud and tax evasion. BACKGROUND : tax fraud and tax evasion is a multi-facetted problem which requires a coordinated and multi-pronged response. Aggressive tax planning is also a problem which requires urgent attention. These are global challenges which no single Member State can face alone. On 2 March 2012, the European Council called on the Council and the Commission to rapidly develop concrete ways to improve the fight against tax fraud and tax evasion, including in relation to third countries and to report by June 2012. In April the European Parliament adopted a resolution echoing the urgent need for action in this area. In response to these requests, the Commission adopted a Communication on 27 June 2012 which outlined how tax compliance can be improved and fraud and evasion reduced. It also identified areas where further legislative action or coordination would benefit the EU and Member States and demonstrated the added value of working together against the increasing challenge posed by tax fraud and evasion. In its Communication, the Commission announced the preparation, before the end of 2012, of an action plan setting out concrete steps to enhance administrative cooperation and to support the development of the existing good governance policy, the wider issues of interaction with tax havens and of tackling aggressive tax planning and other aspects, including tax-related crimes. CONTENT : this action plan identifies a series of specific measures which can be developed now and in years to come. It also represents a general contribution to the wider international debate on taxation and is aimed at assisting the G20 and the G8 in its on-going work in this field. In essence, this action plan contains practical actions which can deliver concrete results to all Member States and lend support in particular to the ten Member States - Bulgaria, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Italy, Lithuania, Malta, Poland and Slovakia - to whom Country Specific Recommendations on the need to strengthen tax collection have been addressed, in the context of the 2012 European Semester exercise. (1) Commission initiatives to be progressed: the Commission recalls that a certain number of important measures have already been taken and suggests the better use of existing instruments. These concern in particular : the implementation of a new framework for administrative cooperation adopted by the Council; closing savings taxation loopholes; the signature and conclusion of the draft antifraud and tax cooperation agreement between the EU and its Member States and Liechtenstein as well as the adoption the draft mandate for opening similar negotiations with four other neighbouring third countries; the adoption of Commission proposals on Quick Reaction Mechanism against VAT fraud and the optional application of the VAT reverse charge mechanism; participate as widely as possible, for the EU VAT forum to attain its objectives. (2) New Commission initiatives: as an immediate response to the identified needs to ensure a coherent policy vis-à-vis third countries, to enhance exchange of information and to tackle certain fraud trends, the Commission has presented two recommendations. - Recommendation No 1 regarding measures intended to encourage third countries to apply minimum standards of good governance in tax matters: the Commission recommends the adoption by Member States of a set of criteria to identify third countries not meeting minimum standards of good governance in tax matters and a ‘toolbox’ of measures in regard to third countries according to whether or not they comply with those standards, or are committed to comply with them. Those measures comprise the possible blacklisting of non-compliant jurisdictions and the renegotiation, suspension or conclusion of Double Tax Conventions (DTCs). Furthermore, Member States should consider ad hoc detachments of experts to assist tax administrations in third countries that commit to complying with minimum standards but are in need of technical assistance. - Recommendation No 2 on aggressive tax planning: currently, some taxpayers may use complex, sometimes artificial, arrangements which have the effect of relocating their tax base to other jurisdictions within or outside the Union. In doing this, taxpayers take advantage of mismatches in national laws to ensure that certain items of income remain untaxed anywhere or to exploit differences in tax rates. Concrete action by all Member States intended to remedy such problems would also improve the operation of the internal market. In the light of this, the Commission recommends that Member States take common effective action in this field. Specifically, Member States are encouraged to include a clause in Double Tax Conventions (DTCs) concluded with other EU Member States and with third countries to resolve a specifically identified type of double non-taxation. The Commission also recommends the use of a common general anti-abuse rule. The Commission plans to establish a Platform for Tax Good Governance composed of experts from Member States and stakeholders representatives to provide assistance in preparing its report on the application of the two Recommendations. (3) Future initiatives: actions to be undertaken in the short term consist of the following : a revision of the parent subsidiary directive (2011/96/EU) so as to ensure that the application of the directive does not inadvertently prevent effective action against double non-taxation in the area of hybrid loan structures; review of anti-abuse provision in EU legislation; promote the standard of automatic exchange of information in international fora and the EU IT tools; establish a European taxpayer's code; reinforced cooperation with other law enforcement bodies; promote the use of simultaneous controls and the presence of foreign officials for audits; use of an EU Tax Identification Number (TIN) guidelines for tracing money flows; develop motivational incentives including voluntary disclosure programmes; develop a tax web portal in order to improve access to reliable tax information in cross-border situations; develop an EU Standard Audit File for Tax (SAF-T). Beyond 2014 : the Commission shall examine the possibility to : (i) develop a methodology for joint audits by dedicated teams of trained auditors ; (ii) develop mutual direct access to national databases ; (iii) elaborate a single legal instrument for administrative cooperation for all taxes. Follow-up : in order to ensure that the actions described in this action plan will be duly implemented, the Commission will put in place appropriate monitoring and scoreboards, which includes in particular regular exchanges of views in relevant committees and working groups on the basis of detailed questionnaires.
- DG {'url': 'http://ec.europa.eu/taxation_customs/index_en.htm', 'title': 'Taxation and Customs Union'}, ŠEMETA Algirdas
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COM(2012)0722
summary
Documents
- Non-legislative basic document published: COM(2012)0722
- Committee report tabled for plenary, single reading: A7-0162/2013
- Results of vote in Parliament: Results of vote in Parliament
- Debate in Parliament: Debate in Parliament
- Decision by Parliament, 1st reading/single reading: T7-0205/2013
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