Why Europe's new tax initiative is a big deal
The FATCA rules and the new transparency rules announced by the five European countries address head on the game of multi-jurisdictionality. What took so long?
By Ronen Palan, City University London
Public outcry over revelations in the Panama papers about global levels of tax dodging has led to political action. Europe’s five largest economies – the UK, France, Germany, Italy and Spain – have agreed to new transparency rules, which will require banks to identify the ultimate beneficial ownership of assets.
If properly implemented, these rules could seriously dent the game that individuals and companies play to evade tax or adopt aggressive tax avoidance planning. As shown, among other revelations in the Panama papers data leak, companies and individuals use strings of shell corporations, set up offshore, in order to avoid detection from their domestic tax authorities.
The new rules will require banks to identify the ultimate beneficial owner of these strings of companies and information on the ultimate beneficial owners will now be automatically exchanged. This removes an important layer of opacity that had been used to evade taxes.
Chasing the footprint
Tax planning schemes typically involve a number of jurisdictions. Each provides its own unique contribution – a bundle of laws, regulations and taxes – which, when linked to other entities in other jurisdictions, serve to minimise a corporate or individual’s tax footprint.
One famous method used is the “double Irish”, where companies set up an office in Ireland, through which they register much of their income from international operations. Only this Irish outpost is structured in such way that it does not meet the threshold of Irish tax residency law. The entity is therefore not subject to taxation. It would typically be controlled by another Irish outfit, this time managed from an extremely low-tax jurisdiction elsewhere, say, Bermuda. This is subject to Irish tax residency, only that it does not have many assets or profits that would be taxed. In this way, Apple managed to avoid paying nearly any tax on its non-US income.
In my career studying tax dodging, I’ve long-complained that regulatory efforts do not cope well with the way these schemes are multi-jurisdictional. So the decision for these five major countries to work together and share information is a significant step.
Will it work?
The system probably will work – and we have a precedent for it. Although we still do not have much detail on the new European scheme, the rules are reminiscent of the US Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA), which my colleague Duncan Wigan at Copenhagen Business School and I have studied. Announced by the US in 2010 and implemented in 2014, the philosophy behind FATCA is as simple as it is powerful.
Instead of seeking to persuade each and every tax haven to change their laws and policies in a process akin to herding cats, the US targets financial intermediaries through FATCA. It deploys the carrot of access to the large US market by insisting that institutions that operate or invest in US markets must automatically exchange information with the Inland Revenue Service on US accounts. This is irrespective of domestic laws in their place of registration, which may or may not prohibit the exchange of this information.
The FATCA rules and the new transparency rules announced by the five European countries address head on the game of multi-jurisdictionality. What took so long? I do not know, but at least they got there. Better late than never. This is a step forward. The net is clearly closing. But, we need to remain vigilant. Vested interests and various lobbies may be able to derail the new rules or evacuate them of content by the time the new rules are in place in early 2017. More information about the details of the new initiative is needed.
Ronen Palan, Professor of International Politics, City University London • This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.
-
National
Fearne, Cutajar return to Cabinet an ‘abandonment’ of accountability, Repubblika says
-
National
Who’s who in the new Cabinet
-
National
Over 50 pigeons found dead in loft during animal cruelty inspection
More in News-
Business News
Navigating the new era of FinTech: MFSA launches high-level masterclasses on AI, crypto, and MiCA compliance
-
Business News
Alkagesta participates in IATA Aviation Energy Forum amid SAF market transition
-
Business News
Economic sentiment moderates towards long-term average in April
More in Business-
Sportsbetting
What new Irish betting regulation could mean for Maltese bookmakers
-
Sportsbetting
Neptunes crowned BOV U18 champions after decisive win over Sliema
-
Football
Futsal Malta 2025/26: Young challengers face Luxol in Laferla Men’s Trophy final
More in Sports-
Books
The 2026 Doreen Micallef National Poetry Contest is now open for entries
-
Books
New Queen Elizabeth II biography launched at the Phoenicia Malta
-
Art
Malta Biennale 2026 comes to a close
More in Arts-
Opinions
We choose to build Momentum. Not because it is easy, but because it is hard
-
Editorial
Labour must now show it is deserving of the electorate’s renewed trust
-
Opinions
Robert Abela can make some courageous reforms, he has nothing to lose
More in Comment-
Articles
Richard England launches new book Katabasis: A Stygian Odyssey
-
Recipes
Steak, onion and mushroom pie
-
Recipes
Lemon and herb swordfish with tomatoes and mushrooms
More in Magazines