Despite Panama Papers, EU Pitching Another Tax Evasion 'Smokescreen'

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The European Commission’s attempt to crack down on corporate tax evasion “is a smokescreen that will not stop multinationals dodging their taxes,” the UK-based social justice organization War on Want declared Tuesday.

The proposal put forth by the Commission on Tuesday would require large companies—those whose annual revenue exceeds €750 million ($856 million)—to publicly disclose tax and financial data. The plan was reportedly “toughened up” in the wake of last week’s Panama Papers revelations.

“The proposal is a recipe for more austerity, cuts to public services and tax competition, and leaves no seat at the table for southern countries, for whom genuine country-by-country reporting could help to collect taxes to fund essential public services.”
—Owen Espley, War on Want

But Koen Roovers, lead EU advocate for the Financial Transparency Coalition, a network of civil groups and governments working to reform financial systems, denounced it as “a half-hearted hybrid that would keep most of the world in the dark.”

According to Reuters:

That is just one of the criticisms leveled by campaigners across the continent and beyond, who say the proposal’s limited scope represents yet another missed opportunity to effectively end tax havens.

For one thing, “the Commission’s proposal only requires reports for EU member states and countries on what is likely to be an arbitrary list of tax havens,” said Oxfam’s EU tax policy advisor, Aurore Chardonnet, on Tuesday.

“The Commission criteria to list tax havens are already absolutely vague,” she explained, “and we also expect EU member states to delay or oppose the process of compiling an official EU list.”

ActionAid’s EU tax advocacy officer, Kasia Szeniawska, echoed that charge, saying the “yet-to-be-agreed list of tax havens…is likely to be selective and highly politicized.”

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