The
report, authored by Aurore Lalucq (S&D, FR) was adopted by the
Economic and Monetary Affairs committee by 46 votes in favour, 4 votes
against and 7 abstentions.
It approves the key elements of the Commission proposal,
notably sticking to the proposed implementation timeline and the
implementation deadline of 31 December 2022 with an aim to having the
law apply swiftly.
The adopted report though does also make
certain changes to the Commission’s proposal. One is the introduction
of a review clause which provides for the revision of the annual revenue
threshold above which a multinational corporation would be subject to
the minimum tax rate, and also calls on assessing the impact of the
legislation on developing countries.
MEPs also seek to reduce certain
exemptions proposed by the Commission, and limit the possibility for
abuse of the rules, notably by introducing a specific article containing
rules to fight tax avoidance schemes.
After the vote Ms Lalucq said, "This
agreement is not perfect. We would have for example liked to have a
higher tax rate. But it is the result of a compromise. And today, the
urgency is for a deal to be reached in the Ecofin, for a rapid
implementation. This was the main guiding principle of today’s vote."
Next steps
The report will now be tabled for a
plenary vote, after which it will constitute the Parliament’s opinion.
This opinion will need to be considered by the member states when they
adopt the final text by unanimity.
Background
The aim of the directive is to transpose
into EU law the reform of the rules on international corporate taxation
which were agreed by the OECD/G20 in December 2021. This global
agreement aims to ensure a minimum corporate tax rate of 15% for large
multinational corporations and constitutes a major step towards an
effective and fair system of profit taxation. The Commission made its
proposal a few days after the international agreement was reached.