Tag Archives: countries
Germany And France Back European Tax Deal
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/bea8b704-a120-11e2-990c-00144feabdc0.html#ixzz2QpLM98JN By Madison Marriage Germany and France have thrown their weight behind the adoption of a framework that would facilitate the automatic exchange of tax information across Europe. The two countries are expected to publish a common position on a proposal to adopt an EU version of the US Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act as they attempt to fight tax evasion following high-profile scandals. This comes as Sven Giegold, the outspoken German MEP, plans to lobby the European Commission to adopt a directive that would bring a Fatca-style agreement into European law. Fatca, which will be implemented in 2014, will require asset managers and other European financial groups to pass details of US clients to tax authorities, resulting in higher reporting costs. German and French finance ministers have said they are ready to put in place similar measures. Pierre Moscovici, the French finance minister, and his German counterpart Wolfgang Schäuble issued statements on April 7 calling for greater tax information sharing across Europe in a move that would closely imitate Fatca. It followed an admission on April 2 by Jérôme Cahuzac, French budget minister, to lying repeatedly when he denied holding a secret Swiss bank account. Mr Cahuzac said he held €600,000 offshore, although reports in the Swiss press suggest the sum was as high as €15m. Mr Moscovici said in an interview with a French radio station that he proposed developing a “European Fatca” with automatic exchange of information. “In the next few days [France and Germany] will adopt a common stance to ensure we make real progress with this endeavour,” he said. Mr Schäuble also told the newspaper Saarbrücker Zeitung that Germany welcomes “every step towards” the automatic transfer of information. He added that the German government is collaborating with other countries on this. At the same time, Mr Giegold’s Green party will also propose a Fatca-style tax package to the Commission. The measures, including the automatic exchange of information between European member states, will be designed to curtail tax evasion by wealthy Europeans. The package will require non-EU financial institutions to provide European tax authorities with information on EU taxpayers’ earnings, which would “exert pressure on tax havens”, the Green party said in a statement. Mr Giegold, who won notoriety through his controversial bonus-cap proposal under Ucits V, says: “To ensure that our financial system respects national tax laws, we need a European Fatca now.” He believes Germany and France should take the initiative and lead a coalition of countries that are willing to take action. Florian van Megen, a tax policy researcher at the European Parliament and parliamentary assistant to Mr Giegold, says the Commission is already “seriously” considering adopting such an agreement. “The [Commission] has seen the US do it without waiting for anyone else – why not catch the same train?” he says. “If Fatca seems to work and compliance seems to be possible, it makes sense to have a similar international framework.” The proposed European tax package would go further than Fatca. Under Fatca, details of all US clients with assets over $50,000 must be passed to the US Internal Revenue Service. European groups in Fatca-partnering jurisdictions can meet their Fatca obligations with their local tax authorities. Several Fatca agreements have already been reached by European member states and the US, including the UK, France, Germany, Italy, Spain and Switzerland. Luxembourg is yet to broker a Fatca agreement with the US but it is said to be close to completing one. Luc Frieden, Luxembourg’s finance minister, recently said his country was ready to extend its collaboration with tax authorities abroad and would no longer reject the idea of an automatic exchange of information between countries. Keith Lawson, senior counsel in tax law at ICI Global, the international fund association, says it is unlikely a European Fatca-style agreement would increase costs for fund groups in Europe. He says: “If firms are already implementing procedures to identify the tax residency of investors under Fatca, it will be easy enough to [comply with a European equivalent]. “There would be no additional burden other than coding the account as UK, Spanish or German, as opposed to a US investor. “There may be some additional costs but these would not be overwhelming.” Last year the head of BNP Paribas’ investment solutions division said the cost of compliance with Fatca would reach €100m. This article first appeared in Ignites Europe, an FT publication Continue reading
Govt To Review Carbon Tax Modelling After EU CO2 Price Cras
AAP 17/04/13 The federal government is expected to review modelling for its carbon tax in the lead-up to the budget, after a vote in the European Union sent the price of CO2 emissions tumbling. A proposal by the European Commission to reform the EU emissions trading scheme (ETS) to have polluters pay more was voted down by EU lawmakers overnight. The controversial plan aimed at freezing – or “backloading” – 900 million carbon permits between now and 2015, to address oversupply and drive up their value. Analysts expected the plan would double the price per tonne of CO2, but the price plunged after the vote was defeated narrowly by 19 votes, with 63 abstentions. As news of the rejection spread, European carbon prices slumped to €2.63 before recovering some lost ground to trade just below €3 ($A3.84). The decision has implications for Australia’s carbon price mechanism, which will link with Europe’s ETS from July 2015. Australia’s carbon price is currently a fixed $23 per tonne and will rise incrementally over the next two years before linking with the European scheme. Treasurer Wayne Swan said the government would re-examine its carbon price before the May budget. “We’ll look at all of our assumptions and forecasts in the budget, and we’ll do that in the normal way,” he told reporters. Climate Change Minister Greg Combet said Treasury would model the carbon price in “the usual way” in coming weeks and provide revised forecasts for 2015/16 and a revised revenue forecast. Treasury modelling had projected the price at $29 per tonne in 2015/16. Mr Combet said the government would continue with its plans to link with the European emissions trading scheme from 2015, when Australia would have a common carbon price with 31 other countries. “Obviously, the price in the European market has an influence on the Australian price at that time, but that is two years away and a lot of things can happen between now and then,” he told AAP. The EU decision was another example of the global financial crisis having an impact on the Australian budget, he said. Continue reading
Survey Shows International Investors Favor U.S. Commercial Real Estate
Markets in the United States dominate as the top global cities for real estate investment, according to participants in the Association of Foreign Investors … Continue reading




