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European Parliament Makes Clear It Wants Full Country-by-Country Reporting
May 26th, 2011
The Monetary Affairs Committee of the EU Parliament has sent the following letter to the European Commission:
Mr Michel Barnier Commissioner for Internal Market and Services European Commission Rue de la Loi 200 B-1049 Brussels 25 May 2011 Country by Country Reporting Dear Commissioner Barnier We wanted to thank you for taking the time to meet with some of us last week in Strasbourg and for your continued positive engagement on country-by-country reporting and your public commitment to come forward with legislative proposals later this year . Before those proposals are published, we would like to reiterate a few key points from our meeting which we hope...
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Does Glencore’s Hong Kong Prospectus Comply with Hong Kong’s Rules on Country-by-Country Reporting?
May 13th, 2011
The Hong Kong Stock Exchange’s listing agreement says:
In addition to the information set out in Appendix 1A, a Mineral Company must include in its listing document……if relevant and material to the Mineral Company’s business operations, information on the following:— (c) compliance with host country laws, regulations and permits, and payments made to host country governments in respect of tax, royalties and other significant payments on a country by country basis;
Note the reference to country-by-country reporting. I stress, the data referred to here is on past performance. There is a separate requiremnt that these payments also be projected.
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Let’s Just Call It an Endorsement of Criminality, or a Slap in the Face for Honest Taxpayers
May 3rd, 2011
The FT reports:
Britons with billions of pounds hidden in Switzerland will pay tax at 50 per cent under a groundbreaking deal that will legitimise their undeclared assets, according to a source familiar with negotiations between the Swiss and British governments. The agreement, which is expected to be announced this month, marks a shift in emphasis in the international crackdown on tax havens. Over the past two years, the focus has been on lifting bank secrecy and exposing evaders. Under the deal, £3bn is expected to be raised over the course of this parliament and investors will also pay a one-off...
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Tax Matters for Developing Countries
April 26th, 2011
Not my title: one Carlo Cottarelli, Director of the IMF’s Fiscal Affairs Department, used for a blog on the Huffington Post. He was talking about what the IMF is doing to help developing countries on this issue. He lists a strong commitment by many countries  to strengthen their revenue systems, through both administrative reforms and improved tax policies. And he refers to good governance and avoiding exemptions and preferences plus the need for political will to drive through tough policy changes to build and support firm, even-handed enforcement.  These, he says, are the issues of concern for developing countries. But he makes no mention at all of:
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