With a broad majority of 587 MEPs (with 50 votes against and 46 abstentions), we are making strong demands to the Commission and the Council to finally develop the EU list of tax havens into a powerful instrument against tax avoidance and tax evasion.
Dear friends and all those who are interested,
On 21 January, the European
Parliament took a landmark decision to improve the EU list of tax
havens. With a broad majority of 587 MEPs (with 50 votes against and 46
abstentions), we are making strong demands to the Commission and the
Council to finally develop the EU list of tax havens into a powerful
instrument against tax avoidance and tax evasion. I was negotiating this
Parlamentary resolution on behalf of the Greens/EFA group. Our demands
can be summed up in one word: consistency. The list was introduced in
2017 with the clear aim of naming tax havens worldwide and imposing
sanctions on them to stop the loss of tax revenues. But the list has had
far too little effect so far. Therefore, a broad majority in the
European Parliament is calling for stricter criteria which have to be
applied consistently – to tax havens inside and outside the EU.
This decisive signal from the
European Parliament is a wake-up call, because the extent of the annual
tax losses through tax havens is immense: according to the latest report by the Tax Justice Network,
direct tax revenues lost world wide amount to 360 billion euros
annually because it is still possible to shift corporate profits and
private assets to tax havens. If one includes the indirect losses due to
tax avoidance by multinational companies, the annual tax losses
worldwide even amount to an estimated 978 billion euros. Against this
background, it is unacceptable that according to the Tax Justice Network
the countries on the current EU list of tax havens account for just 2%
of corporate tax avoidance! That is why we demand important improvements
in the parliamentary resolution to finally sanction tax havens
effectively worldwide.
The EU list of tax havens was first
published in December 2017 and has been regularly updated since then.
The list is the result of a review and dialogue process of the Code of
Conduct Group on Business Taxation in the European Council with third
countries. In this process, the EU member states assess third countries
according to criteria on tax transparency, fair taxation, implementation
of OECD BEPS measures and examination of the economic substance of tax
arrangements for zero-tax countries. In addition to the actual list,
there is also a watch list for countries that have committed to changes.
The decisions of the Code of Conduct Group are taken behind closed
doors and are not subject to parliamentary scrutiny so far.
Together with the other pro-European
parties, we have drafted a strong, progressive resolution so the EU list
of tax havens can finally live up to its potential. We called for
improvements in three key areas:
- We need stricter criteria to ensure that all tax havens are covered by the list.
If a country levies no or only very little corporate taxes, then it
must be included in the list immediately. Furthermore, the criterion of
fair taxation must also cover broad tax exemptions and transfer pricing
mismatches – instead of being limited to evidently preferential tax
measures. Furthermore, we need a tightening of the substance criterion.
This means that states must stipulate in law that tax resident companies
must also prove that they have economic substance in that country. Such
a substance criterion already exists, but it is decidedly too weak. Why a tightening of the criteria is necessary can be clearly demonstrated by the example of the Cayman Islands:
The Cayman Islands were removed from the EU list of tax havens on 6
October 2020 after introducing minimal substance criteria for companies
and weak enforcement measures. They were removed from the list despite
the fact that the Cayman Islands are responsible for 16.5 per cent of
global tax leakage – making it the jurisdiction that causes the most
damage to other countries! To date, the Cayman Islands have a corporate
tax rate of zero percent. Therefore, the level of corporate taxation
must become a core criterion: if a country levies no or only a very low
corporate tax, then it must automatically be put on the list. Together
with the Social Democrats, we were also able to successfully introduce
an amendment that lends weight to our demand for an appropriate
effective minimum corporate tax rate closed to the average statutory
corporate tax rate in the EU (21.7% in 2019).
- However, stricter criteria are only of use if they are consistently implemented. The
decision on whether to categorise a country as a tax haven must be
arrived at in a transparent, coherent and impartial manner.
This is important in order to decisively reduce the possibilities for
political influence. The USA, for example, has never been included in
the list even though it too is a de facto tax haven due to severely
restricted automatic exchange of information. This must change. With
this resolution, we MEPs call on the Council to give a mandate to the
Commission to carry out the review of third countries in the future and
to draw up a proposal for the EU list of tax havens accordingly. This
list must be made public before the Council decides on it. Furthermore,
the European Parliament calls for an observer role in the negotiations
of the Code of Conduct Group. In the medium term, the whole process
should be formalised at EU level, preferably through a legally binding
instrument. With these measures, we want to ensure that the decision
which countries are sanctioned as tax havens is made on the basis of
sound, pre-defined criteria. The tax losses that member states incur as a
result of tax havens subsequently have to be borne by the citizens.
That is why we need maximum transparency and an independent, consistent
examination of third countries – with the involvement of the European
Parliament!
- We must stop with the double standards. We
cannot demand consistent scrutiny of third countries without applying
the same standard within the EU. Not only does this undermine Europe’s
credibility, but we also ignore a crucial part of the problem: European
member states are responsible for 36 percent of all tax losses worldwide
and thus harm others! This means that we must not only focus on tax
avoidance in third countries but also on tax havens within the EU. In
the text of the resolution, we therefore demand that EU member states be
measured against the same criteria as third countries. It is not
acceptable that Malta can act as a tax haven without any reprimands,
while Panama has been put on the EU list of tax havens for the same
practices!
As a result of Brexit, the UK has
become a third country with its “spider web of tax havens” in its
overseas territories and crown dependencies. This British spider web is
responsible for 37.4% of all tax losses worldwide. In our resolution, we
therefore call for a thorough review of Britain and its territories
against the strengthened criteria outlined above. This is particularly
important given that the draft EU-UK Trade and Cooperation Agreement
contains few commitments against tax dumping. As a member of the EU, the
UK’s tax rules have been a costly burden on other member states. We
cannot accept this burden being imposed on us by a third country,
especially in the context of the burden on public budgets caused by the
pandemic.
The report of the European Parliament
that has just been adopted sends another important signal. We are aware
that tax havens hit poorer countries disproportionately hard: Even
though rich countries have much more tax losses overall, these losses
are much smaller in relation to the public budget than in poorer
countries. In Germany, for example, the lost tax revenues correspond to
11.26 per cent of health care expenditure, whereas on the African
continent they correspond to an average of 52.5 per cent of the
countries’ expenditure on health care! Rich countries, including in
Europe, are responsible for these high losses. In doing so, we are
undermining our own development policy goals. Therefore, we call on the
Council’s Code of Conduct Group to involve and consult developing
countries more. To this end, we propose the establishment of a working
group with third countries, including representatives of civil society,
to promote constructive dialogue.
This decision of the European
Parliament thus contains many important points to improve the EU list of
tax havens so that it can finally live up to its potential. 587 of the
683 MEPs who were (virtually) present at the plenary session voted in
favour of the resolution. The fact that we were able to pass such a
progressive report with such a large majority is a strong signal for
greater tax justice.
With confident European greetings,
Sven Giegold letter
Here is the link to the resolution: https://sven-giegold.de/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/Beschlusstext-EN_EU-Liste-der-Steueroasen_2021-01-21.pdf
© Sven Giegold
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