Multinationals will have to disclose the amount of tax they pay in each EU country; The public and tax authorities will be able to see what taxes are being paid where; Some flexibility but detailed rules to prevent multinationals from abusing it  
      
    
    
      
        
            
                Legislators sealed a deal obliging multinationals to 
publically declare what taxes they pay in each EU country, overcoming 
five years of foot-dragging by some governments.
             
         
     
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
            
        
    
        
            
            
            
            
                
    
    
        
            The 
deal struck on Tuesday night between European Parliament and Council 
negotiators sets in place rules that require multinationals and their 
subsidiaries with annual revenues of over EUR 750 million, and which are
 active in more than one country, to publish and make accessible the 
amount of taxes they pay in each member state. The information will also
 need to be made available on the internet, using a common template, and
 in a machine-readable format.
Specifics to report
To facilitate the use of the information
 provided and increase transparency, the data provided will need to be 
broken down into specific items, including the nature of the company’s 
activities, the number of full-time employees, the amount of profit or 
loss before income tax, the amount of accumulated and paid income tax 
and accumulated earnings.
Tackling clever tricks
Subsidiaries or branches falling below 
the revenue threshold will also be required to report if they are deemed
 to exist only to help the company avoid the reporting requirements.
Some provisions allow room for manoeuvre
 for multinationals to be temporarily exempt from some reporting 
requirements, but these are nonetheless strongly circumscribed.
Extra-territorial reach 
The tax transparency reports should also extend to the EU list of non-cooperative jurisdictions
 for tax purposes outside the EU (countries on the so-called EU "black" 
and "grey" lists), says the agreed text. Although MEPs wanted stronger 
provisions to tackle profit shifting to non-EU tax havens, the new rules
 will still shed some light on taxes being lost to tax havens. In January 2021, Parliament agreed that 6 of the 20 largest tax havens are EU countries, with two of the top five spots occupied by member states. Also, a study
 by the Director of the EU Tax Observatory concludes that about 80% of 
the profits shifted in the EU are shifted to EU tax havens.
Strong review clause
One of the most difficult points for 
negotiators was on full disaggregation on country-by-country reporting. 
Parliament negotiators underlined that these rules are a first step in 
achieving tax transparency and secured a strong and robust review clause
 that allows rules to be revisited in 4 years and extended after an 
assessment.
Quotes
Lead negotiator Evelyn Regner
 (S&D, AT) said: “Today's deal marks a significant step towards tax 
transparency. With the public Country-by-Country Reporting Directive — 
which obliges big corporations operating in the EU to disclose their tax
 information — we have answered society's calls for more tax 
transparency. Parliament has been fighting for this directive to be 
implemented for more than five years and today we were finally able to 
reach a deal with the Council. We have laid the foundations for tax 
transparency in the EU with this deal, and this is just the beginning”.
Lead negotiator Iban García del Blanco
 (S&D, ES) said: “We have come a long way. We would have liked to 
see a more solid position on transparency from the Council, which would 
have allowed a more ambitious agreement. However, after five years 
waiting for the Council to unblock the file, we have managed to bring 
our positions closer on the obligation to report, the accessibility to 
information, the duration of the safeguard clause and the terms of the 
review clause, to name a few. We had a responsibility to seize the 
political window of opportunity opened by the Portuguese presidency to 
make major progress towards approving and developing a directive that 
makes public country-by-country reporting mandatory for multinationals 
and increases the transparency on where they pay their taxes.”
Next steps
The text now needs to be endorsed by the
 Committees on Economic and Monetary Affairs and Legal Affairs and the 
Parliament as a whole, as well as Council. The vote in plenary is 
expected after the summer recess.
ECON
      
      
      
      
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