Print
See related documents
Committee Opinion | Doc. 15266 | 18 April 2021
Fighting fiscal injustice: the work of the OECD on taxation of digital economy
Committee on Social Affairs, Health and Sustainable Development
A. Conclusions of the Committee
(open)1. The Committee on Social Affairs,
Health and Sustainable Development (“Committee on Social Affairs” hereafter)
welcomes the report prepared by Mr Georgios Katrougkalos (Greece,
UEL) for the Committee on Political Affairs and Democracy (“Political
Affairs Committee” hereafter). It attaches great importance to tax justice
as an essential driver of social justice, based on its earlier work
regarding tax havens, a proposal for a European tax on financial
transactions, a basic income and the platform economy. It therefore
appreciates the continued emphasis by the Political Affairs Committee
on taxation challenges for European countries in the global context
through regular Enlarged Assembly’s debates on the activities of
the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).
2. The Covid-19 pandemic has accelerated the digitalisation trends
in the world economy, highlighted the interdependence of major stakeholders
(States as regulators, and multinational enterprises as influential actors)
and accentuated the demand for a fair and adequate taxation of digital
enterprises. The OECD’s wealth of expertise on taxation and fiscal
policies has naturally made it a focal point for international negotiations
on modernising the taxation of the digital economy. It is now essential
that policy makers at national and international levels acknowledge
the virtues of a multilaterally agreed taxation framework for the
digital economy as proposed by the OECD, and validate their agreement
by mid-2021, which would no doubt facilitate a more balanced and
vigorous socio-economic recovery of national economies.
3. The Committee on Social Affairs supports the conclusions and
proposals contained in the report prepared by Mr Katrougkalos. It
welcomes progress accomplished by the international community on implementing
the global tax transparency standards developed by the OECD and
wishes to encourage further work towards better use of fiscal tools
to advance sustainable development against the backdrop of an expanding
digital economy. With this in mind, the Committee on Social Affairs
proposes several amendments to reinforce the text.
B. Proposed amendments to the draft resolution
(open)Amendment A (to the draft resolution)
At the end of paragraph 1, after the words “for democracy”, add the following words:
“and social justice”
Amendment B (to the draft resolution)
At the end of paragraph 1, add the following sentence:
“The Enlarged Assembly welcomes the signing of an updated co-operation agreement (Memorandum of Understanding) between the Council of Europe and the OECD in December 2020, which confirms both Organisations’ mutual interest in promoting shared values and objectives, inter alia, in relation to sustainable development and tax matters.”
Amendment C (to the draft resolution)
After paragraph 5, insert the following paragraph:
“The Enlarged Assembly also supports the OECD’s work in promoting global standards for collecting value-added tax from online sales of goods, services and digital products, including as regards international exchanges through the platform economy. It furthermore welcomes the OECD’s guidance on taxing virtual currencies and crypto-assets aimed at developing a new tax reporting framework by the end of 2021.”
Amendment D (to the draft resolution)
At the end of paragraph 7.1., add the following words:
“and, if necessary, seal off the areas where a broad multilateral consensus has been reached by concluding an interim agreement by mid-2021;”
Amendment E (to the draft resolution)
At the beginning of paragraph 7.4., replace the word “adopt” by the following word:
“implement”
Amendment F (to the draft resolution)
At the end of paragraph 7.4., add the following words:
“push for public country-by-country reporting by enterprises;”
Amendment G (to the draft resolution)
After paragraph 7.6., insert the following paragraph:
“co-ordinate national fiscal policies and instruments for more effective carbon emissions pricing in support of action to curb climate change;”
Amendment H (to the draft resolution)
At the end of paragraph 7.8, add the following words:
“that is multilateral and at least as inclusive as the proposed Inclusive Framework”
C. Explanatory memorandum by Ms Selin Sayek Böke, rapporteur for opinion
(open)1. As rapporteur for opinion on
the activities of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD) and rapporteur on socio-economic inequalities for the Committee
on Social Affairs, I would like to thank Mr Georgios Katrougkalos
for his constructive approach in preparing the report on the OECD’s
work on digital taxation for the Political Affairs Committee and
his highly valuable contribution to our hearing on overcoming the
socio-economic consequences of the Covid-19 pandemic. I recall with
great satisfaction our joint statement on the roadmap for post-Covid-19
economic recovery of May 2020 when the first wave of the pandemic
was still unfolding.
2. The Covid-19 pandemic has shaken up the global economy and
drained public budgets by reducing States’ tax revenues – while
the needs for direct financing support to the vulnerable population
and businesses have expanded dramatically. It has also significantly
increased the speed of digitalisation of our economies. All of these
developments have not only made the existing socio-economic inequalities
more visible, but also bear the risk of further deepening them unless
comprehensive policy changes are undertaken rapidly. These existing
socio-economic inequalities have led to public resentment against
social and fiscal injustices. Indeed, our States can no longer tolerate
tax avoidance by businesses – be it rent-seekers or digital enterprises
– to the detriment of public budgets in so many countries. Digitalisation
has facilitated tax avoidance, contributing to digital enterprises’
business models to prosper at the expense of other “traditional”
businesses. A similar wedge is also created as rent-seekers, who
wish to dodge regulations to shift profits/rents geographically.
3. In this context, we must also recall that the global digital
economy consumes over 12% of global electricity and is expanding
further very fast with a huge carbon footprint which undermines
action against climate change: as the OECD points out, “70% of all
energy-related CO2 emissions across G20 and
OECD countries are completely untaxed”. It is high time to fix this aberration,
and our States should heed the OECD’s advice on co-ordinating fiscal
instruments for carbon pricing (Amendment
G). We should moreover welcome the signature of an updated
co-operation agreement (Memorandum of Understanding) between the
Council of Europe and the OECD in December 2020, which confirms
both Organisations’ mutual interest in promoting shared values and
objectives, inter alia, in
relation to sustainable development and taxation (Amendment
B).
4. The OECD’s economic assessment shows that closing digital taxation
loopholes through a multilateral and inclusive agreement (of 139
countries as of February 2021) “could increase global corporate
income tax revenues by about USD 50-80 billion per year” or more
(about USD 60-100 billion per year) when “taking into account the
combined effect of [tax] reforms” and reduced harms from corporate
tax competition among countries. Importantly, implementing the OECD
proposals of the Inclusive Framework under Pillar One of the future
agreement would allow to reallocate taxing rights on about USD 100
billion of profits of digital giants from a few beneficiary countries
to a much broader circle of countries. Moreover, adapting the international
tax system to the digital age would better ensure a level playing
field between digitalised enterprises and other companies. We could
call it digital tax justice.
5. As Mr Katrougkalos rightly notes in his report, much progress
has been achieved in the multilateral negotiations, but many hard
issues remain to be resolved. However, the negotiators’ wish to
have a blanket consensus on all outstanding issues by all 139 countries
may lead to significant blockages and leave “low-hanging fruit”
out of reach for years (as has been the case with the multilateral
trade negotiations on the Doha Round in the World Trade Organization
(WTO) framework). However, in order to avoid an unwarranted delay of
the framework, several alternative ways of proceeding could be considered.
Some argue that a possible solution to speed up the process is to
decouple the two pillars, and that this is justified by the OECD’s
impact assessment which shows that there is not much interaction
between the two pillars. Pillar two – defining the minimum tax –
could provide a quick win, keeping the impetus for international
tax reforms. It could also seem more reasonable to seal off the
areas where a broad multilateral consensus has been reached by concluding an
interim agreement on global digital taxation by mid-2021 within
the alliance of the willing and ambitious countries, which would
wield positive peer pressure on those lacking ambition or political
will (Amendment D). In
this context, we should welcome the recent statement by Janet Yellen,
in her first major speech as US Treasury Secretary on 5 April 2021,
calling for a global minimum corporate tax rate to “stop the race
to the bottom”.
6. The Independent Commission for the Reform of International
Corporate Taxation (ICRICT) proposes that, in case the OECD process
is stalled, States should consider the following policy options:
apply a higher corporate-tax rate to large corporations in oligopolistic
sectors with excess rates of return; set a minimum effective
corporate-tax rate of 25% worldwide to stop base erosion and profit shifting;
introduce progressive digital-services taxes on the economic rents
captured by multinational firms in this sector; require publication of
country-by-country reports by all corporations benefiting from State
support; and publish data on offshore wealth to enable all jurisdictions
to adopt effective, progressive wealth taxes on their residents
and prevent or reduce illicit financial flows. The ICRICT notes
regarding these five steps that: “As long as wider reforms are blocked
by leading OECD members, these measures will support governments
in mobilising much-needed additional revenue. In addition, unilateral
measures such as these serve to bring effective pressure to bear
on the international community for genuinely fair, international
tax reforms”. Furthermore, trade unions argue that policy makers
could consider guiding enterprises in the right direction while
negotiations are ongoing, so that receiving bailout funds would
be conditioned to the extent companies make use of tax havens.
7. However, any such piecemeal efforts should be designed with
due care so that they do not replace an inclusive and global solution
but rather push for it. The risk of multiple, idiosyncratic regional
or national approaches bears the risk of undermining international
co-operation and economic development. This risk should be minimised
when designing any piecemeal alternative to a currently pending
global solution. Any such effort by a regional or national agency
should seek to support the ongoing work of the OECD.
8. In the absence of a global agreement in the near future, the
risk of seeing unilateral, nationalistic tax measures adopted towards
(foreign) digital enterprises is more than real – some countries
like France have already done so, and several other European countries
(including Italy, Spain, Austria and the United Kingdom) are ready
to follow the suit. While this could cause a domino effect of retaliatory
measures, this could also build pressure on the reticent superpower
by demonstrating the virtues of multilateralism for all as opposed
to unilateralism that serves the interest of just a few countries.
Parliamentarians should therefore not stand by idly; they should
actively contribute to building support for the multilateral agreement
as far as possible based on a general consensus. However, if necessary,
they should also support initiatives that could be stepping-stones
towards a more ambitious outcome.
9. The report by Mr Katrougkalos also puts a finger on the link
between tax justice and social justice by underlining that poorly
co-ordinated action for the taxation of multinational enterprises
undermines the funding of essential public services and may ultimately
endanger the welfare of citizens. This link could be stressed more
explicitly also in the draft resolution (Amendment
A). The ongoing and intertwined global crises are a stark
reminder of the need to revamp our systems of checks and balances
and change our economic structures. This requires a revisiting of
our fiscal policies, both spending and tax policies. The pandemic
has reminded us of the need to increase the role of the public sector
in rights-based areas such as health, education, care services and
housing (universal basic services). The climate crisis is a constant
reminder of the need to revisit our consumption and production pattens,
pushing for a green transformation. The already existing and day-by-day
deepening socio-economic inequalities require that all such transition
be just and equitable. Indeed, all these phenomena point to a single
direction: the need to revamp the welfare state focusing on redistributive
spending and tax policies. Therefore, we need to change our fiscal
policy frameworks aiming to achieve social and fiscal justice. We
should aim to ensure universal public provision of basic services, progressive
and fair tax systems, and narrowing of socio-economic inequalities
by making better political fiscal choices.
10. Aggressive tax planning by multinational enterprises that
allows syphoning off capital to tax havens has been widespread in
the last decades while the wages’ share of GDP has been eroding
globally due to the erosion of wages, jobs, worker rights and social
protection. Workers and consumers, as well as SMEs, pay the price.
Jan De Loecker and Jan Eeckhout document the significant rise of
mark-ups of multinational enterprises above their marginal costs
from 10% in 1980’s to 60% today. There
are public calls for a unitary and formula-based taxing of these
mark-ups, and many advocates emphasise that the Inclusive Framework
of the OECD would serve such a purpose. While the speeding up of
digitalisation has led to concentration of power in the hands of
a few digital firms, the discussion must go beyond just the digital
tax. It has to be about tax avoidance by MNEs, monopolies or rent
seekers. This tax avoidance not only leads to loss of important
revenues for many countries, but also shatters the sense of economic
fairness and justice (Amendment H).
11. Tax transparency should be an integral part of the plan. It
is one of the most effective means for identifying tax avoidance
and fraud. Currently, member States’ tax authorities know multinationals’
detailed data on turnover, gross profits and taxes paid in other
member States and non-European Union tax havens in which they operate.
However, this information is not public. Making this information
publicly accessible to citizens, journalists, researchers and policy
makers would allow for increased public scrutiny, enhancing accountability.
Such public scrutiny could push firms to internalise some of these
social costs of fiscal dumping through profit shifting to tax havens.
One such example is of the time when many global brands moved to
save their reputation by changing their business practices upon
the public outcry against child labour. This is one example where
transparency worked as effectively as regulations and incentives.
As such, public country-by-country reporting should be prioritised (Amendment
F).
12. In addition to the OECD/G20 efforts to conclude the global
agreement on the Inclusive Framework, we should highlight and support
the OECD’s work on some other important areas in helping States
raise revenue from the digitalised value chains worldwide. One such
area is the widening use of the OECD’s standards for collecting
value-added tax (VAT) from online sales of goods, services and digital
products, including as regards international exchanges through the
platform economy. Some 109 countries are already implementing
these standards or are considering doing so in the near future.
The application of these standards helps reduce distortions in competition
between online traders and traditional businesses and yields considerable
revenue. It appears that the European Union has recuperated € 14.8
billion of VAT revenues through these measures over the first four
years of their use. Moreover, an extra € 107 billion of additional
revenues for States have been identified thanks to voluntary information
disclosure programmes and offshore investigations under the Global
Forum .
Another area is the OECD’s guidance on taxing virtual (crypto) currencies :
it provides an analytical overview of the taxation approaches and
emerging tax challenges for over 50 countries. The updating of the Common Reporting
Standard for the automatic exchange of information and extending
its coverage to crypto assets should be finalised in 2021. I believe
it is important to acknowledge these aspects of the OECD’s work
on digital taxation in the Enlarged Assembly’s resolution (Amendments C and E).
13. In conclusion, I believe that the Enlarged Assembly should
support the draft resolution put forward by the Political Affairs
Committee and further strengthen the proposed text by incorporating
amendments aimed at completing the overall picture as described
above.