EU: EU member states struggle with the proposed FTT

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 4 Bouverie Street, London, EC4Y 8AX

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2025

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

EU: EU member states struggle with the proposed FTT

van-der-made.jpg

Bob van der Made

An EU-27 Council Working Party on Tax Questions – Indirect Taxation meeting was held on the proposed EU-wide FTT on April 16 2013, which revealed that the momentum for an EU FTT seems, temporarily, gone. The EU FTT dossier is in an impasse because of other pressing political issues, with member states now focusing on savings and automatic exchange of information in the wake of Luxemburg's recent announcements (easier to achieve political agreement on; European Council is expected to adopt Conclusions on savings in May). In addition, there's the recently announced five big EU member states' pilot on multilateral tax information exchange. Furthermore, the response to the OECD/G20 initiative on BEPS is very high on the political agenda at least until mid-June. Moreover, there's a (perhaps temporary) lack of direction and political and technical coordination among the ECP-11 (participating EU member states under the enhanced cooperation procedure. Germany's position is deadlocked until the September 2013 federal elections and France now seems increasingly cautious about an EU FTT after losing market share as a result of the introduction of its domestic FTT with which it is also facing operational difficulties.

Since a few weeks, ECP-11 representatives have been meeting separately (outside the standard formal EU-27 Council WG structure) every other week. However, during the April 16 technical working group meeting, the ECP-11 apparently were far from cohesive on even very basic points such as what they want to achieve, who they want to tax, what the FTT should look like, and how it should be implemented and collected.

The EU-27 member states are expected to discuss EU FTT again on May 22 and the Irish presidency will report to the ECOFIN Council and the European Council in June. Croatia has indicated it wishes to join the ECP-11 (Austria, Belgium, Estonia, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, Portugal, Slovakia, Slovenia and Spain) after it joins the EU on July 1 2013.

Bob van der Made (bob.van.der.made@nl.pwc.com)
PwC, Brussels and Amsterdam

Tel: +31 88 792 3696

Website: www.pwc.com

more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

The deal to acquire ITR's parent company is expected to complete by the end of May 2025
JBS, the biggest meat company in the world, allegedly used Luxembourgian ‘mailbox companies’ to avoid taxes between 2019 and 2022
Despite the conviction of Jessa Dabalos, the Tax Practitioners’ Board’s investigative work continues with five outstanding PwC scandal probes
Heads of tax need to push their teams forward as strategic business advisers to add value across their organisations, says Sandy Markwick
Scott Bessent reportedly felt undermined by Musk naming Gary Shapley as acting IRS commissioner; in other news, Baker Tilly will combine with a top 15 US firm
The promise of nine years’ tax certainty and a ‘rational and pragmatic’ government process makes APAs a no-brainer, Indian tax advisers tell ITR
Despite garnering significant revenues from multinationals, Italy’s digital services tax presents pressing double taxation issues, say Stefano Simontacchi and Francesco Saverio Scandone of BonelliErede
ITR’s research shows that in-house tax counsel in Asia also feel underserved by their advisers’ international networks
World Tax global head of research Jon Moore tells ITR how his team spots standout submissions, and gives early statistical insights into this year’s entries
Australia’s conservative opposition will repeal controversial tax agent reporting rules if elected in the country’s May general election
Gift this article