CD Launches Action Plan on Base Erosion and Profit ShiftingThe CD released its Action Plan on Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) on Friday. The BEPS initiative was launched earlier this year at the request of the G20 to counter alleged abuses by multinational corporations to artificially reduce income tax. The Action Plan is aimed to counter perceived weaknesses in international taxation that allow corporations to exploit mismatches in domestic tax regimes, take advantage of deficiencies in tax treaties, especially in the digital economy, and pursue aggressive transfer pricing. The BEPS Action Plan is an ambitious plan with 15 actions that can be grouped into five main areas, intended to be addressed over a two-year timeframe:
Implementation of the Action Plan is to be achieved through a dedicated project in which CD member and non-member governments alike will be able to participate. Non-governmental organizations, including the business community, will be consulted and a "high-level policy dialogue" has been promised on an annual basis. There has been much enthusiasm in many government quarters for the BEPS initiative as governments struggle with fiscal pressures and seek to increase tax revenues. Interestingly, however, as I noted in my February 21 blog post, the CD's own data show only a slight decrease in corporate tax as a percentage of the total tax take in CD countries from 1965 to 2010 and a net increase in the overall tax burden (measured by the corporate tax to GDP ratio) over that period. BEPS is highly politicized and the development of tax policy, which is inherently complex, in such an environment and in a short timeframe, carries many risks of ineffective regulation and unintended consequences. Despite the vociferous criticism by some politicians of corporate tax planning, it remains to be seen whether individual governments are prepared to make changes in their own tax regimes, which often include tax incentives to businesses to locate or expand in their jurisdiction, in order to achieve the CD's desired co-ordination and integration of international corporate taxation. Authors
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