No more shifty business: Campaigners call for new tax rules
March 29th, 2013
March 29th, 2013
Cross posted from Eurodad.
In a response to the OECD’s February report Addressing Base Erosion and Profit Shifting, 58 campaigning organisations say it’s time to make multinationals pay their fair share of tax. Eurodad, Christian Aid and others call on the OECD and G20 to work with the United Nations Tax Committee and governments in developing countries to define new rules for the taxation of multinational companies.
The international system for taxing multinationals is broken and out of date, with many loopholes which allow unscrupulous companies to avoid paying their fair share – as the recent Google, Ikea, Amazon, Glencore and Starbucks scandals have clearly shown.
Outdated rules
The OECD identifies aggressive tax planning by multinationals as a fundamental cause of base erosion, which includes tax avoidance and evasion. But countries such as the UK, Germany, France and the US have only asked for solutions when their own economies have felt the consequences. For many years, however, unfair tax rules have been seriously undermining efforts to tackle poverty in developing countries.
The current tax rules, which were written 80 years ago, assume that the different entities that form multinationals exchange goods and services as if they were mutually independent. But this is a fiction. These different subsidiaries follow an overall business strategy. The truth is that the tax system has not kept pace with the way multinationals operate.
Need global solution
Eurodad and the other organisations agree with the OECD that the fundamentals of the current tax system need revisiting. And because this is a global problem that requires a global solution, developing countries cannot be excluded from the process. We need tax justice for everyone, not just for rich countries. So far, the OECD seems not to have understood.
The new briefing paper, No more shifty business, calls on the OECD and G20 to work with the United Nations Tax Committee and governments in developing countries to define new rules for the taxation of multinationals.
The new rules must
The current tax system raises serious issues of fairness and compliance. Aggressive tax planning by unscrupulous multinationals hinders development and increases inequality. That is why civil society organisations across the world are calling on the OECD, G20 and UN Tax Committee to work together and find an alternative that reflects how multinationals actually operate today – and to make them pay their fair share of tax in all countries where they operate.
Read the full briefing.