September 28th, 2011
On the 22 September, the
Committee for Economic and Monetary Affairs (ECON) in the European Parliament passed a report containing both concrete measures and broader statements against the race to the bottom in European corporate taxation, citing the financial strain this is placing on European countries and their citizens.
The EU is currently revising the parent-subsidiary directive, with the intention of preventing double or multiple taxation when the profits of a subsidiary are distributed to the parent company or companies. Too often such treaties effectively lead to double-non taxation. To address this the MEPs voted for an amendment to...
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May 27th, 2011
Publish What You Pay and Eurodad have launched a
briefing paper (PDF) calling on the EU to propose legally binding measures to require natural resource companies to publish key financial information for each country and project in which they operate.
In recent months, civil society groups working on financial transparency and on tax and development have actively engaged the European Commission and other European institutions responsible for drafting key legislative and non-legislative proposals that will potentially reform European financial reporting standards.
This paper aims to contribute to the current debate...
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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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March 16th, 2011
Last week, the European ministers made a call to establish a
country-by-country reporting standard for multinational companies in the extractive sector – a much needed first step to curb tax evasion and avoidance in poor countries. This decision follows groundbreaking reports by the European Parliament to enhance global tax policies which would allow mobilising further development finance to meet internationally agreed development goals.
This is a partial victory for civil society organisations in Europe who have been strongly advocating for specific policy reforms to make global tax policies work for the poor.
European ministers take first steps to curb tax...
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