On Monday, the Committees on Economic and Monetary Affairs and Legal Affairs endorsed the provisional agreement
reached on 1 June between European Parliament and Council negotiators
on with 69 votes in favour, 3 votes against and 2 abstentions.
The agreed bill will 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.
Reporting will also extend to each third country on EU’s list of non-cooperative jurisdictions
(so called EU “black” and “grey” lists). Such information will need to
be made available on the internet, using a common template and in
machine-readable format.
Read more here and find the text of the provisional agreement here.
Quotes
Rapporteur Evelyn Regner (S&D, AT) said: "According to a study
by G. Zucman et al., approximately 80% of profits generated in the
European Union that are shifted out of it, are finding their way back to
the European Union, specifically to EU tax havens.
This is where our deal on public
country-by-country reporting kicks in. Indeed, our deal is a valuable
stage victory for more corporate tax transparency in Europe."
Rapporteur Iban García del Blanco
(S&D, ES) said: “After five long years of blockade of this dossier
by a certain number of member states, with today’s vote we are getting
one step closer to approving the agreement reached with the Council. I
am proud that, with the pCBCR Directive, Europe is setting the trends by
adopting a first-of-its-kind law globally that will make currently
undisclosed information publicly available.
By obliging big multinationals to
disclose where they pay taxes in Europe and in the tax havens, we will
shed an important light on dodgy dealings. Knowing that about 80% of the profits shifted in the EU
are shifted to EU tax havens, we will bring our own house in order. We
will not stop there. In the upcoming review, we will work hard towards
extending the obligation to disclose information in every country of the
world on disaggregated basis, which is a long-standing priority of the
Parliament”.
Next steps
Following a standard legal linguistic
check, the Council shall adopt its position at first reading. The
European Parliament as whole is expected to approve the Council position
after the summer recess, after which the directive will be deemed
adopted and published in the Official Journal. Member states will then
have 18 months to transpose it into national law. Four years after its
transposition, the Commission shall review its impact and assess a
possible extension of the rules to all non-EU countries.