Algirdas Semeta

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

Algirdas Semeta

European Commissioner for Taxation, Customs Union, Audit and Anti-Fraud

Algirdas Semeta

As the man at the heart of EU tax reform, Commissioner Semeta maintains his place among our Top 10 most influential people in tax.

He has slipped from second to fourth place as the scandals surrounding companies exposed for corporate tax avoidance have tended to set the agenda of tax policy this year, but as an ambitious reformer, he has made his mark on the shape of the European tax landscape.

Among Semeta’s most important achievements of the past year are leading the EU fight against tax evasion and avoidance, facilitating the first ever enhanced cooperation initiative in EU taxation with the financial transaction tax (FTT), and progress in VAT reform including an agreement on a quick reaction mechanism (QRM) and a proposal for standard declaration.

“Over the past year, we have made more progress in the campaign to fight tax evasion than in the previous decade before that,” Semeta says. “At EU level, the action plan I presented at the end of 2012 served as the perfect springboard to launch this surge forward. It allowed EU leaders a focal point for their discussions at the May summit and a basis on which to commit to concrete measures against tax evasion and avoidance.”

The increased momentum allowed agreement to be reached on the QRM to fight VAT fraud and on mandates to negotiate stronger tax agreements with Switzerland and four other close neighbours.

“EU leaders have also called for the stronger Savings Directive to be agreed before the end of the year, after years of impasse on this important proposal,” Semeta says. “In addition, the Commission brought forward a new proposal in June which will enable the EU to have the widest application of automatic information exchange anywhere in the world. We also, through the new economic governance structure, issued country specific recommendations to a number of member states to improve their administrative efficiency at home and step up their efforts to address non-compliance.”

Semeta expects the Commission’s most important achievements next year will include a stronger tax agreement with Switzerland, shaping the EU contribution to BEPS and OECD global standard of AEI, and a likely agreement on the FTT by 11 member states.

Further reading

EXCLUSIVE: Commissioner Semeta announces his tax reform priorities for 2014

European Commission tightens corporate tax rules

EU member states give green light for FTT


The Global Tax 50 2013

« Previous

Starbucks, Amazon & Google

View the complete list

Next »

Tax journalists

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

Encompassing everything from international scandals to seismic political events, it’s a privilege to cover the intriguing world of tax
In his newly created role, current SSA commissioner Bisignano will oversee all day-to-day IRS operations; in other news, Ryan has made its second acquisition in two weeks
In the age of borderless commerce, money flows faster than regulation. While digital platforms cross oceans in milliseconds, tax authorities often lag. Indonesia has decided it can wait no longer
The tariffs are disrupting global supply chains and creating a lot of uncertainty, tax expert Miguel Medeiros told ITR’s European Transfer Pricing Forum
Corporate counsel should combine deep technical knowledge with strategic dynamism, says Agarwal, winner of ITR’s EMEA In-house Indirect Tax Leader of the Year award
Luxembourg’s reform agenda continues at pace in 2025, with targeted measures for start-ups and alternative investment funds
Veteran Elizabeth Arrendale will lead the new advisory practice, which will support clients with M&A tax structuring, post-deal integration, and more
MAP cases keep increasing, and cases closed aren’t keeping pace with the number started, the OECD’s Sriram Govind also told an ITR summit
Nobody likes paperwork or paying money, but the assertion that legal accreditation doesn’t offer value to firms and clients alike is false
Ryan hopes the buyout will help it expand into Asia and the Middle East; in other news, three German finance ministers have called for a suspension of pillar two
Gift this article