Tax activists are lining up to berate Brussels’ legislators, arguing they aren't going far enough after MEPs agreed on a tax transparency bill that will require giant companies to disclose where they pay taxes and make profits.
Lawmakers say the deal is a breakthrough in combating corporate tax avoidance, which deprives
national coffers in the EU of €35 billion to €70 billion each year.
Tuesday’s agreement is especially noteworthy, as the public
country-by-country reporting (pCBCR) bill had been gathering dust in
Brussels, due to legal disagreements, since the Panama Papers scandal broke in 2016.
From 2023, companies with annual global revenues exceeding €750 million and their subsidiaries will have to publish their tax details
in a standardized and readable format on their websites — free for the
public to access and scrutinize. These details will also include how
many employees they have in their EU offices, in an effort to crack down
on letterbox companies.
“For the first time in ages, lawmakers are finally establishing the
rules for multinational corporates, not the other way around,” Evelyn
Regner, an Austrian socialist lawmaker on the Parliament’s negotiating
team, said in a text message. “The agreement will ensure financial,
corporate and taxation transparency, particularly in our own house.”
That’s not good enough, according to anti-corruption NGO Transparency International; anti-poverty NGO Oxfam;
the European Network on Debt and Development (Eurodad), a civil society
group that campaigns for a more equitable global financial system; and Public Services International (PSI), a global federation of more than 700 trade unions representing 30 million workers in 154 countries.
These NGOs lament the fact that the disclosure rules are limited to multinationals’ EU operations despite efforts
by the Parliament to include global activity, which EU governments in
the Council refused to accept. As a compromise, legislators agreed that companies can present their activity outside of the bloc in an aggregate number — apart from business in a territory on the EU’s blacklists and graylists of tax havens, which currently include Australia, Turkey, Panama and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
“The proposed legislation as it stands is almost meaningless, as it
would only require multinational companies to disclose their tax
payments made in the EU and in countries on the deeply-flawed
EU tax havens list,” said Elena Gaita, Transparency International EU’s
senior policy officer. “This means that companies' operations in most of
the world will still be exempt from public scrutiny.”
That’s not fair, according
to the European Commission’s tax chief, Paolo Gentiloni, and
influential lawmakers Sven Giegold of the Greens and S&D member Paul
Tang, who chairs the Parliament’s subcommittee on tax. For them, the
pCBCR deal should be celebrated — not belittled.
“I’m saddened that my colleagues can’t see the positive elements of
the deal,” Giegold said Tuesday when asked about the backlash from NGOs
during a press conference with Gentiloni and Tang, who were unveiling
the European Tax Observatory — a research hub that’s received €1.2
million in EU funds for work carried out in 2020 and 2021. “There’s no
reason for disappointment for tax justice activists today. It’s a step
forward, not a step backwards.”...
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