BBC News,
Laurence Peter, 22 May 2013
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Austria's chancellor (centre) has joined the EU chorus against tax fraud |
The
president of the European Council, Herman Van Rompuy, said there was a
"strong political will" in Europe to make tax systems fairer.
He said the
EU would draft tougher rules this year on banking transparency. He was speaking
after summit talks in Brussels.
A key goal
is to prevent multinational firms exploiting legal loopholes.
There is
widespread public anger that some big corporations have minimised their tax
payments at a time of economic hardship.
Tax evasion
and avoidance cost EU states 1tn euros ($1.3tn; £0.85tn) a year - more than was
spent on healthcare in 2008.
The EU is now promising action against "aggressive tax planning" - that is, the
complex yet legal accounting tricks used by some companies to minimise their
tax payments.
EU leaders
also want global standards on exchanging bank account data. The issue will be
high on the agenda of a summit of the G8 industrialised nations in Northern
Ireland next month.
'Real
breakthrough'
Mr Van
Rompuy said the economic crisis had injected new momentum into the debate on
fair taxation. But he insisted that the EU was not seeking tax harmonisation
across Europe.
"It's
a real breakthrough... I am really convinced there is a strong political will
by leaders not just on the European level, but on the global level, to tackle
tax fraud," he told a news conference.
Germany's
Chancellor Angela Merkel said that EU members Austria and Luxembourg - famous
for their banking secrecy - agreed on the need for tax authorities to exchange
information on private income. But "they attach great importance to also
holding negotiations with third countries", she added.
Switzerland,
outside the EU, is a major competitor in the market for rich bank clients.
Austria and Luxembourg want to ensure that Switzerland and other low-tax
jurisdictions in Europe, such as Monaco and Liechtenstein, do not have an
unfair advantage.
Austrian
Chancellor Werner Faymann on Wednesday joined the call for a crackdown on tax
evasion.
A European Parliament resolution on tax evasion on Tuesday urged the EU to halve the 1tn-euro
annual losses by 2020, by curbing tax loopholes and havens.
The MEPs
also called for a joint EU blacklist of tax havens.
The
European Commission is pressing for automatic exchanges of people's earnings
data between tax authorities.
Some
experts argue that business tax planning also reduces the revenue that
developing country governments can collect, for example by shifting declared
profits to countries where they are lightly taxed.
The BBC's
economics correspondent Andrew Walker says politicians are keen to show voters
that tax systems are fair, after a wave of unpopular budget cuts aimed at
reducing deficits.
Google,
Starbucks and Amazon are among the companies that have faced tough questioning
over their tax affairs recently.
And this
week Apple came under fire in the US Congress over its low tax payments.
Energy
co-operation
The other
main theme at the Brussels talks was energy policy - especially the need to
improve Europe's energy infrastructure, develop renewables such as solar and
wind power and remove barriers to competition. Much of Eastern Europe relies on
Russia for gas - and in the past pricing disputes have led to supply shortages
in mid-winter.
The
Commission is urging EU governments to enact energy legislation that was agreed
in 2011, warning that on current trends imports of gas will rise to 80% of the
gas consumed in the EU by 2035.
The EU
already imports 406bn euros' worth of oil, gas and coal annually - 3.2% of
total EU economic output (GDP).
The
fragmentation of Europe's energy market makes it difficult to woo long-term
investors willing to commit to multi-billion-euro infrastructure projects. The
energy mix varies greatly across Europe, from nuclear-dominated France to
coal-dependent Poland.
But a key
goal is to connect Europe's isolated "energy islands" - former Soviet
bloc countries like Estonia and Bulgaria - to European grids and storage
facilities.
The
distortions in Europe's energy market mean that Bulgarians - the EU's poorest
citizens - pay more for their electricity than consumers in the UK or Germany.
In the
global economy the energy blockages threaten to put Europe at a serious
disadvantage. The gas price index for EU households rose by 45% in 2005-12,
compared with 3% in the US, while the figures for electricity were 22% and 8%
respectively, the Commission says.
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