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GRI has strongly welcomed the proposal for a UN Convention on Tax – published this month by a group of civil society experts – which aligns with the reporting requirements in GRI’s ground-breaking Tax Standard.
The draft UN Tax Convention, which has been led by the Global Alliance for Tax Justice and Eurodad, has an objective to ensure tax systems are transparent, equitable and effective. It includes explicit focus on the role of taxes in safeguarding human rights, environmental protection, and supporting the Sustainable Development Goals.
The proposal would require all member states to implement legislation to require multinational corporations in their jurisdictions to publish country-by-country tax reports, based on the requirements in the GRI Tax Standard. The draft bill responds to a call in 2021 by the UN High-Level Panel for Financial Accountability, Transparency and Integrity (FACTI) for the establishment of a UN tax convention.
GRI 207 is the first and only globally applicable standard for tax transparency, setting expectations for public disclosure of tax payments on a country-by-country basis, alongside tax strategy and governance. It was developed in response to the growing stakeholder demands – especially from investors – for meaningful tax information to give insight to the fiscal behavior of companies.
Peter Paul van de Wijs, GRI Chief External Affairs Officer, said:
GRI developed a topic Standard on Tax in recognition of the vital role tax contributions have on sustainable development, and in response to widespread stakeholder demands for tax transparency. Developed by a multi-stakeholder expert group, GRI 207 launched in December 2019 and is freely available in nine languages.
The OECD BEPS (base erosion and profit shifting) policy has initiated country-by-country reporting to tax authorities, however does not require for information to be public. An EU directive to introduce tax transparency rules for multinationals is set to be implemented from June 2023.