MEPs adopted two reports on taxation, the first on the impact of national tax schemes on the EU economy and the second on reducing the EU VAT gap.
The report on the effect of national taxation on the EU economy, drafted by Markus Ferber (EPP, DE) was adopted Tuesday by 469 votes in favour, 94 against, and 137 abstentions.
The report on legislative changes to reduce the VAT gap, drafted by Olivier Chastel (Renew, BE) and adopted on Wednesday by 510 votes in favour, 74 against and 108 abstentions.
Effect of national tax measures on the EU economy
The report argues that the single market
requires harmonisation and coordination in tax policy-making in order
to increase the integration of the single market and prevent base
erosion.
Impact on SMEs
While the costs of compliance with tax
obligations are estimated for large multinationals to be around 2% of
taxes paid, for SMEs this is estimated around 30%. Moreover, the report
points out that differences in national tax regimes can act as barriers
to SMEs trying to operate across borders.
MEPs consider that harmonisation of the
tax base, such as the common corporate tax base, could reduce compliance
costs for SMEs operating in more than one Member State. They reiterate
that taxing profits in the country where the economic activities take
place would enable governments to offer a level playing field to their
SMEs.
Members also stress the need to tax
companies using a fair and effective formula for allocating taxing
rights between countries, taking into account factors such as the
workforce and the existence of tangible assets. They call on Member
States to rapidly agree on a proposal for a European corporate tax code.
Harmonisation and coordination of tax policies
The report points out that the EU tax
coordination mechanisms such as peer review procedures within the Code
of Conduct Group (CoC) and country-specific recommendations in the
context of the European Semester need to be improved.
MEPs note the limits of the current
decision-making process in Council when it comes to improving
coordination and tackling harmful tax practices. They call for the full
potential of the EU Treaty to be explored. They also stress that the
ideal level of coordination of tax policies to ensure maximum impact is
the international arena.
Specific areas for reform
MEPs say specific reforms should focus on the following key areas:
- reducing the debt equity bias in corporate taxation which makes equity financing less interesting
- the Commission should investigate whether some Member States are
distorting competition by artificially lowering their marginal effective
tax rates
- address the abuse of tax incentives for research and development
where such activities have little to do with increasing spending on
research or development and instead are about profit shifting and
aggressive tax planning.
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