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Information to be reported by multinationals
Increasing transparency, the directive requires multinationals to report information -- detailed country-by-country -- on revenues, profits, taxes paid, capital, earnings, tangible assets and the number of employees.
This information must be reported, already for the 2016 fiscal year, to the tax authorities of the member state where the group's parent company is tax resident.
If the parent company is not EU tax resident and does not file a report, it must do so through its EU subsidiaries. Such "secondary reporting" will be optional for the 2016 fiscal year, but mandatory as from the 2017 fiscal year.
Information exchange
The directive requires tax authorities to exchange these reports automatically, so that tax avoidance risks related to transfer pricing[1] can be assessed. For this, it builds on the EU's existing framework for automatic exchange between tax authorities, established by directive 2011/16/EU. An existing common communications network will be used, thereby saving implementation costs.
The directive sets deadlines of:
It also requires the member states to lay down rules on penalties applicable to infringements.