Yahoo - AFP, February 13, 2017
Switzerland faces uncertainty as voters reject a tax reform plan aimed at keeping the country attractive to foreign businesses |
Switzerland
faced uncertainty Monday after voters rejected a tax reform plan aimed at
keeping the country attractive to foreign businesses but derided by critics as
a corporate handout.
The wealthy
Alpine nation had come under intensifying pressure from the Organisation for
Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) over a tax regime that treats
foreign companies more favourably than domestic ones.
The OECD
has called the Swiss system harmful and said it fuels market distortions. Bern
had promised to resolve the issue by 2019.
Central to
that effort was a government-backed plan approved by parliament but defeated by
60 percent of voters in Sunday's referendum, the latest poll in Switzerland's
direct democracy system.
The
proposal would have levelled the tax rate for domestic and foreign firms while
creating new deductions for innovation as well as research and development,
tailored to attract global companies.
"There
is now a real danger that Switzerland will disappear from the radar of
international companies," Finance Minister Ueli Maurer was quoted as
saying Sunday by the RTS public broadcaster.
He also
confirmed that Switzerland will not meet its pledge to the OECD on reforming
its tax system within two years.
Bern is
under pressure to resolve the impasse quickly amid fears that companies will
start putting money in places where long-term tax stability is assured.
There is
even a risk of Switzerland's "blacklisting" by the OECD and European
Union, the Zurich-based chief of PricewaterhouseCoopers, Andreas Staubli, was
quoted as saying by the Bloomberg news agency.
Swissmem,
which represents the mechanical and electrical engineering industry, said in a
statement that the government should "quickly find a solution for a new
reform plan", warning that Sunday's vote had plunged companies into
"a great deal of uncertainty."
But
opponents of the reform plan were rejoicing.
The
leftwing Socialist Party (PS) called the government's plan a "scam"
that would have forced ordinary taxpayers to fill inevitable revenue
shortfalls.
The
referendum had "shown the red card to arrogance" the party said in a
statement, claiming the days of giving sweetheart deals to powerful
corporations were "no longer tolerated."
The PS
however said it was committed to working with the government in generating a
new plan to address both the OECD and EU concerns, while also appealing to
voters.
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