Greece: GAAR rising: First administrative rulings in the spotlight

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Garden, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2025

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Greece: GAAR rising: First administrative rulings in the spotlight

intl-updates-small.jpg

Greece has embraced the European Commission's recommendation (on December 6 2012) for an action plan to strengthen the fight against tax fraud and tax evasion, which, among others, includes the implementation of a general anti-abuse rule (GAAR). Namely, by virtue of Article 38 of the Greek Tax Procedures Code (i.e. L. 4174/2013), a domestic GAAR has been introduced into the Greek fiscal landscape, in force as of January 1 2014, according to which the tax authorities may disregard any artificial arrangement or series of arrangements aiming to avoid taxation and lead to a tax advantage.

Considering the aggressive stance generally adopted by the Greek tax administration during recent tax audits, the first GAAR footprints have appeared in the decisions issued from the dispute resolution department (DRD), before which the taxpayer may challenge a tax assessment note, prior to addressing the dispute before the administrative courts.

In light of the above decisions from the DRD, both referring to stamp duty assessments on loans, the Greek tax administration denied the stamp duty exemption provided on the basis of the "territoriality" principle whereby loans signed and executed outside of Greece would not fall within the scope of the Greek Stamp Duty Code. The above conclusion was drawn by claiming the application of the GAAR.

Specifically, up to now, a loan agreement entered into between a Greek and a foreign entity may be exempted from stamp duty on the basis of the "territoriality" principle, provided that certain conditions were cumulatively met (i.e. signature of the loan outside Greece, along with the loan's "execution" outside Greece, which effectively means that the respective payments should be exclusively realised through foreign bank accounts). Namely, the Greek borrower entity should maintain a foreign bank account, via which all cash flows relating to the said loan (i.e. the deposit of the loan amount, payment of interest and repayment of the loan) are affected.

Nevertheless and despite stamp duty levy being of a typical form-over-substance nature, these new rulings invoking the GAAR's application and following a substance-over-form approach concluded that the intermediation of a foreign bank constitutes an artificial arrangement whose goal has been to avoid stamp duty imposition. The Greek tax administration has disregarded the existence of the foreign bank account of a Greek company, since the loan has been used for the settlement of local liabilities, e.g. in one case it was even used for the payment of the Greek company's stamp duty liability arising from a previous tax audit.

Lastly, the domestic GAAR's application has not yet been tested before the Greek courts. One could at least hazard a guess under the purposive interpretation adopted by the courts until now, but the GAAR might leave taxpayers without a map or compass. If one claims that the map based on previous case law was very changeable and sometimes unpredictable guide, almost inevitably the first fundamental question arises: Does the domestic GAAR provide adequate safeguards for the taxpayer?

kalakou.jpg

 

Konstantina Kalakou

Konstantina Kalakou (konstantina.kalakou@gr.ey.com), Maroussi

EY

Tel: +30 210 2886 000

Website: www.ey.com

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

APAs should provide a pragmatic means to agree to an arm's-length outcome for an Australian entity and for the ATO, the tax authority said
Overall revenues and average profit per partner also increased in the UK, the ‘big four’ firm revealed
Increasingly complex reporting requirements contributed towards the firm’s growth in tax, it said
Sector-specific business taxes, private equity tax treatment reform and changes to the taxation of non-residents are all on the cards for the UK, authors from Herbert Smith Freehills Kramer predict
The UK’s Labour government has an unpopular prime minister, an unpopular chancellor and not a lot of good options as it prepares to deliver its autumn Budget
Awards
The firms picked up five major awards between them at a gala ceremony held at New York’s prestigious Metropolitan Club
The streaming company’s operating income was $400m below expectations following the dispute; in other news, the OECD has released updates for 25 TP country profiles
Software company Oracle has won the right to have its A$250m dispute with the ATO stayed, paving the way for a mutual agreement procedure
If the US doesn't participate in pillar two then global consensus on the project can’t be a reality, tax academic René Matteotti also suggests
If it gets pillar two right, India may be the ideal country that finds a balance between its global commitments and its national interests, Sameer Sharma argues
Gift this article