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G20 endorses crackdown on corporate tax evasion

Finance ministers and central bank governors of the G20 group give a news conference at the 2015 IMF/World Bank Annual Meetings in Lima, Peru. The so-called Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) plan, which seeks to close the loopholes multi-nationals use to avoid taxes, was adopted by the G20 on Friday.

AFP
Lima, Peru


Finance ministers from the world’s leading economies have given the green light to a new plan to crack down on tax evasion by multi-national Corps which costs countries at least $100bn a year.
The so-called Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) plan, which seeks to close the loopholes multi-nationals use to avoid taxes, was adopted by finance ministers from the G20 group of leading industrialised and emerging economies at a meeting in Lima, Peru.
G20 leaders must now give final approval at a summit in November in Turkey, although the initiative was swiftly dismissed as lacking bite by one prominent critic.
The 15-point plan aims to tackle low tax bills for the likes of Google, Apple and McDonald’s, which have managed to sharply reduce their taxes while remaining within the law, provoking public outrage in recent years.
Turkish Deputy Prime Minister Cevdet Yilmaz, who announced the G20 decision, called it a “historic moment” for the fight against tax evasion.
He said the plan addressed a “very comprehensive set of issues” including profit-shifting across borders, Corps’ use of no-tax status in multiple countries and the digital economy.
“These are very complicated issues that required an extensive technical effort and a hard-to-build consensus in some cases,” he told a press conference on Friday in Lima, where finance ministers and central bank governors from around the world are gathered this week for the annual meetings of the International Monetary Fund and World Bank.
But the work on consensus-building has only just begun.
Preventing companies from shifting profits to low-tax jurisdictions and debt to high-tax jurisdictions will require “a very large group of countries,” particularly developing nations, to get on board with the plan, Yilmaz said.
International charity Oxfam has criticised the plan as a “toothless” package that will do nothing to stop poor nations being cheated out of billions of dollars.
“Rich governments are all bark and no bite when it comes to corporate tax dodging,” said Oxfam’s Manon Aubry when the plan was announced on Monday.
But the author of the long-awaited initiative, the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), said it would give governments across the board a much-needed fiscal boost.
“Base erosion and profit shifting is sapping our economies of the resources needed to jump-start growth, tackle the effects of the global economic crisis and create better opportunities for all,” said OECD Secretary-Feneral Angel Gurria.
The man who supervised the drafting of the plan, the OECD’s Pascal Saint-Amans, has said it means “playtime is over” for tax-dodging multi-nationals.
The OECD calculates that national governments lose $100bn to $240bn a year, or four to 10% of global tax revenues, because of companies that game the system.
The plan, which applies to international companies with revenues of at least €750mn, seeks to make them pay tax in the country where their main business activity is based.
“It’s not about paying low or high taxes, it’s about paying your taxes,” said British finance minister George Osborne.
The OECD has called for a multilateral deal by the end of 2016 enabling countries to update bilateral tax treaties in line with the new plan without the need to renegotiate them one by one.
The plan comes nearly a year after the “LuxLeaks” revelations that some of the world’s biggest companies — including Pepsi and Ikea — lowered their tax rates to as little as one% in secret pacts with tax authorities in Luxembourg.
Luxembourg’s Finance Minister Pierre Gramegna joined the calls for governments around the world to sign up for the new plan.
“We need a level playing field, which means we have to implement it all together and at the same pace,” he said.
“That is not the end of the story,” said German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble.
“If there is no implementation it remains an impressive amount of paper.”

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