165 research outputs found
Current Tax Treaty Issues, 50th Anniversary of the International Tax Group, G. Maisto (Editor), EC and International Tax Law Series Vol. 18, IBFD. 2020
This is a short review of an important anniversary volume of the "International Tax Group", which has made many significant contributions to international tax law over the last 50 years
Taxing where value is created in a post-BEPS (digitalized) world?
As international tax reform aims to ensure "taxation where value is created", it is crucial to ask questions about the relationship between taxation and value creation, in particular with respect to increased digitalisation. As the notions of value creation and substance are inextricably linked to a functional analysis of business activity, further the challenges arising from artificial intelligence taking independent decisional control over key business functions will also need to be considered. This brief note outlines some of the existing developments in the relationship between these factors. The blog is available at http://kluwertaxblog.com/2018/05/30/taxing-value-created-post-beps-digitalized-world
Opinion statement ECJ-TF 3/2022 on the EFTA court decision of 1 June 2022 in Case E-3/21, PRA Group Europe, on the discriminatory interaction between the "interest barrier" and group contributions
This is an Opinion Statement prepared by the CFE ECJ Task Force on the PRA Group Europe case, in which the EFTA Court delivered its decision on 1 June 2022. At issue in PRA Group Europe was the interaction of the Norwegian "interest barrier rule" ("interest limitation rule"), which generally limit the deductibility of interest payments to affiliated resident and non-resident entities to 30% of EBITDA, and the group contribution rules, which permit tax effective transfers between group members, but are limited to Norwegian entities. As group contributions also increase the EBITDA of the recipient Norwegian entity (and decrease it at the level of the paying Norwegian entity), companies in the Norwegian tax group can achieve interest deductions under the interest barrier rules where profits ("tax EBITDA") and interest expenses are distributed unevenly between the companies in the group, while a similar opportunity to escape (or lessen the impact of) the interest barrier rules is not available to cross-border groups. The EFTA Court took a combined perspective on the interaction of those rules and found them to constitute an unjustified restriction of the freedom of establishment under Articles 31 and 34 of the EEA Agreement. The EFTA Court's decision is particularly interesting from an EU law perspective, as the interest barrier rule of Article 4 of the Anti-Tax Avoidance Directive (ATAD) similarly foresees the option for Member States to introduce a domestically-limited "interest barrier group" to permit a calculation of exceeding borrowing costs and the EBITD at the local group level. The CFE ECJ Task Force welcomes the EFTA Court's progressive impetus on fundamental freedoms doctrine: PRA Group Europe AS makes it clear that for purposes of identifying a restriction, for establishing comparability and for justification, a combined perspective on the interaction of two sets of rules – here the interest barrier on the one hand and the group contribution regime on the other – is necessary. From that perspective, the interaction of the Norwegian rules on the "interest barrier" and on group contributions leads to unjustified discrimination in cross-border situations. However, if asked to decide on a similar case, the CJEU might take a different approach. First, the CJEU could take a different perspective on the available grounds of justifications and, e.g., accept the coherence of the tax system as such ground. Second, Article 4 ATAD gives the Member States the option to treat an "interest barrier group" as a single taxpayer and to limit the group perspective to domestic settings. Even if such an option in the ATAD is not viewed as "exhaustive harmonization", one could wonder if the mere existence of the ATAD and the value judgments made by the EU legislature therein could lead to a different outcome in the EU (CJEU) vis-à-vis the EEA (EFTA Court).info:eu-repo/semantics/submittedVersio
Opinion Statement ECJ-TF 2/2022 on the CJEU decision of 27 January 2022 in case C-788/19, European Commission v Kingdom of Spain (form 720), on the lack of proportionality of the consequences derived from the failure to provide information concerning assets or rights held in other member states of the European Union or the EEA
This is an Opinion Statement prepared by the CFE ECJ Task Force on the Commission v Spain case (also cited as the 'Form 720' case), in which the First Chamber of the Court of Justice of the EU (ECJ) delivered its decision on 27 January 2022. The Court, in its decision, ruled in favour of the action brought by the Commission and did not fully follow the reasoning of AG Saugmandsgaard Øe in his Opinion of 15 July 2021, who proposed only to partially accept the action brought by the Commission. The Court held that the Kingdom of Spain had failed to fulfil its obligations under articles 63 TFEU and 40 of the EEA Agreement by imposing disproportionate measures on the failure to duly comply with the obligation to provide information concerning assets and rights located abroad. The Spanish legislation provided for very serious economic consequences, such as the taxation of the value of not duly declared assets and rights as unjustified capital gains with no statute of limitations period. The legislation also provided for a proportional fine of 150% of the tax calculated on amounts corresponding to the value of those assets or those rights, which could be applied concurrently with flat-rate fines. At the same time, such flat-rate fines were much higher than the penalties imposed in respect of similar infringements in a purely national context, not being capped by any amount. Commission v. Spain is an important case as it addresses a number of relevant issues regarding the limits that the Member States must respect when implementing measures to counteract international tax avoidance and evasion.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Opinion Statement ECJ-TF 2/2021 on the CJEU decision of 25 february 2021 in case C-403/19, société générale, on the calculation of the maximum amount of a foreign direct tax credit
The Court’s judgment in Société Générale reinforces the established case law that EU law neither prohibits juridical double taxation as such nor does it put an obligation on the residence Member State to prevent the disadvantages which could arise from the exercise of competence thus attributed by the two Member States. The parallel existence of taxing jurisdiction, however, must be distinguished from the exercise of such jurisdiction by each Member State: While Member States are free to determine the connecting factors for the allocation of fiscal jurisdiction in tax treaties, “the exercise of the power of taxation, so allocated by bilateral conventions for the avoidance of double taxation, the Member States must comply with EU rules and, more particularly, observe the principle of equal treatment”. It is generally accepted in the Court’s case law that both the ordinary credit and exemption (also with progression) are permissible methods to avoid double taxation, and the Court in Société Générale has confirmed this position specifically with regard to the “maximum deduction” in the ordinary credit method in tax treaties, even though it can result in a disadvantage for cross-border income as compared with domestic income. As the disadvantage in Société Générale was due to the difference between gross-basis taxation of dividends in the source Member States (Italy, the Netherlands and the UK) and net-basis taxation of those foreign-source dividends in the residence State (France), it remains to be seen if future cases will bring clarity in light of the EFTA-Court’s Seabrokers judgment as to which expenses can be lawfully allocated to foreign income from the perspective of the residence Member State. The CFE Tax Advisers Europe stresses that in an Internal Market neither (unintended) double non-taxation nor double taxation is acceptable. It therefore calls on all EU institutions to analyze and address the remaining issues of juridical double taxation (including in the context of the upcoming actions amending current corporate tax directives).info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Opinion Statement ECJ-TF 1/2022 on the CJEU Decision of 25 November 2021 in case C-437/19, état luxembourgeois v L, on the conditions for information requests and taxpayer remedies
The CFE Tax Advisers Europe welcomes the judgment of the Court as it provides further clarification on the legal protection of the information holders afforded by Article 47 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union in cases of cross-border exchange of information. Article 47 of the Charter guarantees that national courts can review the cross-border information request in order to assess its legality and also that the information holder must be able to ascertain the reasons upon which the order they receive is based. Moreover, the CFE Tax Advisers Europe welcomes the illumination regarding the concept of “foreseeable relevance”, but also notes that additional clarification will be needed to distinguish permissible group requests from illegal “fishing expeditions”.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Opinion statement ECJ-TF 3/2021 on the CJEU decision of 18 March 2021 in case C-388/19, MK v Autoridade Tributária e Aduaneira, on the taxpayers’ option to avoid discriminatory taxation of capital gains
The CFE welcomes the judgment as it clearly refers to a case of unjustified discrimination. However, there are some questions that are left open (and that Court was not required to provide an answer). The Court’s judgment in MK reinforces the established case law that EU law prohibits the adoption of non-EU compliant regimes, even if they are offered as an option to fully EU-compliant regimes. Member States are still free to adopt optional regimes but have to ensure that each one of the routes that the taxpayer may elect does not lead to unfavourable tax treatment. The CFE stresses, however, that the creation of EU-compliant options should not necessarily imply that Member States simply extend the rules conceived for residents to non-residents, as such extension may be quite both burdensome and disproportional. The CFE notes that MK may lead Member States to adopt simplified rules that end up treating non-residents more favourably. Which should not be regarded as a matter of unfairness, taking into account that they will normally be again subject to taxation at the Residence Member State, which is(traditionally) the one placed in the best position to assess a taxpayer’s ability to pay and their corresponding final tax burden.info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersio
Opinion statement ECJ-TF 4/2022 on the ECJ decision of 22 September 2022 in case C-538/20, W AG, on the deductibility of foreign final losses
In this CFE Opinion Statement, submitted to the EU Institutions in November 2022, the CFE ECJ Task Force comments on the ECJ decision of 22 September 2022 in W AG (Case C-538/20), on the deductibility of foreign final losses. The W AG decision makes it clear that comparability should be examined differently depending on whether the exemption is granted by domestic or tax treaty law. The CFE ECJ Task Force has reservations regarding this distinction. For the taxpayer, an exemption has the same economic effects regardless of whether it is adopted through domestic law or tax treaty law. Moreover, W AG departs from the Court’s reasoning and thinking in Lidl Belgium, which also concerned Germany and the same rules. Ideally, the Court should have made this explicit. Finally, it remains to be seen whether Marks and Spencer (Case C-446/03) is still “good law” or if W AG was one of the final nails in the coffin of the “final loss” doctrine.info:eu-repo/semantics/submittedVersio
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