The European Union decided not to include Turkey in its blacklist on Monday (15 February) after the Turkish authorities made some commitments to facilitate the exchange of information on tax matters.
EU countries have been discussing over the past days an update to the
bloc’s list of non-cooperative jurisdictions on tax issues.
National experts reached an agreement on Monday not to include
Turkey, while Dominica was added to the EU blacklist and Barbados was
removed.
Ankara will remain on the EU’s ‘grey list’ of countries that must adopt a series of reforms on tax matters by a set deadline.
An EU official told EURACTIV that
Ankara was asked “to commit at a high political level by the end of May”
to activate the automatic exchange of information with member states on
tax matters.
Turkey already failed to adopt these changes by the end of last year, as demanded by the EU to avoid its inclusion.
The approval of the updated blacklist was initially planned for the
Ecofin Council of EU27 economy and finance ministers on Tuesday. But the
issue was excluded from the agenda at the last minute.
Instead, the updated list will be included as a non-discussion topic
in the EU ambassadors’ meeting (COREPER) on Wednesday and formally
adopted by the Foreign Affairs Council on 22 February, where ministers
are expected to meet in person.
Portugal’s Minister of State and Finance, João LEÃO, whose country is
currently chairing the EU Council, confirmed after Tuesday’s Ecofin
Council that Turkey was not included in the blacklist.
“We were able to make progress in terms of cooperation with Turkey in tax matters,” he said.
European Union diplomats have reached a preliminary agreement to give
Turkey more time to meet tax transparency requirements, two diplomatic
sources said, in a move that could weaken the bloc’s blacklist but at
the same time avoid a new clash …
The new deadline came as a compromise to bridge divisions among the
27 governments as the EU and Turkey are trying to ease the tensions, recently worsened by Ankara’s gas exploration in the eastern Mediterranean.
EU member states including France, Greece, Cyprus and Austria opposed
giving Turkey additional time to cooperate on tax matters, EU diplomats
said. But Germany pushed back against its inclusion, as Berlin is
trying to improve the bilateral relationship to maintain Ankara’s
cooperation on migration and other dossiers.
The EU created in 2017 a blacklist of uncooperative jurisdictions and
countries that encourage abusive tax practices. The updated version
will comprise American Samoa, Angilla, Dominica, Fiji, Guam, Palau,
Panama, Samoa, Trinidad and Tobago, the US Virgin Islands, and Vanuatu
and Seychelles.
EURACTIV
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