EU failing to tackle tax dodging one year after 'LuxLeaks': campaigners

Published Tue, Nov 3, 2015 · 12:18 AM

[BRUSSELS] EU countries are still failing to tackle tax avoidance practices despite vowing to shut down loopholes after the LuxLeaks scandal one year ago, a report by several campaign groups said Tuesday.

The 28 member states of the European Union have passed a number of measures in the 12 months since LuxLeaks revealed that top companies, including Pepsi and Ikea, had reduced their tax rates to as little as one per cent in sweetheart deals with Luxembourg.

The revelations, unearthed by a group of investigative journalists, were a huge embarrassment to European Commission head Jean-Claude Juncker, who served almost two decades as Luxembourg prime minister at the time of the deals.

But the report by 19 organisations including Oxfam, coordinated by the European Network on Debt and Development, said most member states still provide "ample opportunities" for multinationals to "dodge taxes and hide money."

"Although tweaks have been made and some loopholes have been closed, the complex and dysfunctional EU system of corporate tax rulings, treaties, letterbox companies and special corporate tax regimes still remains in place," the report said.

Luxembourg and Germany remain the "worst culprits" in terms of offering options to conceal company ownership, the report said, although Denmark and Slovenia are introducing public registers of company ownership.

More EU governments are, for example, pushing for confidentiality to conceal where global companies do business and how much tax they pay, it said.

"The citizens of Europe have now waited a year for the EU to get its act together," Eurodad coordinator Tove Ryding said in a statement. Instead, although a few loopholes have been closed, new ones have also appeared.

After the scandal emerged, Juncker tasked the Commission to push through steps to crack down on tax deals.

Brussels has launched a series of probes into the deals and last month it ordered Starbucks and Fiat to each repay up to 30 million euros (S$46.2 million) in back taxes for deals they had with the Netherlands and Luxembourg respectively.

EU ministers also agreed last week that national authorities would automatically exchange information on tax deals with multinationals.

AFP

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