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Poland blocks agreement on minimum tax law

2022-04-05T15:25:55.302Z


Poland blocks agreement on minimum tax law Created: 04/05/2022 17:21 Federal Finance Minister Christian Lindner is disappointed by the Polish blockade of the minimum tax. © Tobias Schwarz/AFP Pool/dpa The international community has been fighting for a minimum tax for large companies for years. Warsaw is now blocking implementation in the EU - presumably to exert pressure elsewhere. Luxembourg


Poland blocks agreement on minimum tax law

Created: 04/05/2022 17:21

Federal Finance Minister Christian Lindner is disappointed by the Polish blockade of the minimum tax.

© Tobias Schwarz/AFP Pool/dpa

The international community has been fighting for a minimum tax for large companies for years.

Warsaw is now blocking implementation in the EU - presumably to exert pressure elsewhere.

Luxembourg - Poland is blocking an EU law to implement the international minimum tax.

"Unfortunately, there was no agreement today on the implementation of global minimum taxation in the European Union," said Finance Minister Christian Lindner (FDP) after a meeting of EU economics and finance ministers on Tuesday.

"We agreed with all but one member state - Poland - that this is a big step forward."

French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire, who currently chairs the Finance Council, expressed anger.

The reasons why Poland rejected the law are a "mystery," he said.

"I just want to tell you that we have answered all the technical concerns of the Member States." Ultimately, Estonia, Malta and Sweden had no objections either.

They also responded to Poland's concerns.

"So there must be another reason, a reason I don't know about," Le Maire said.

In Brussels it is suspected that Poland wants to use the blockade to blackmail the release of money from the Corona aid fund.

The EU Commission has so far delayed the payment due to concerns about the independence of the Polish courts.

However, Le Maire did not confirm this.

In December, the European Commission presented a legislative proposal to implement the first part of the ambitious international tax reform that the EU had previously agreed on with over 130 other countries.

The aim is to prevent corporate profits from being shifted to tax havens.

International companies with sales of at least 750 million euros per year should pay at least 15 percent in taxes, regardless of where they are based.

The proposal still needs to be approved by EU countries and the European Parliament before the law can come into force from 2023.

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According to the Commission, another part of the global tax reform is to be fleshed out later in the year with a legislative proposal.

This is intended to ensure that international digital corporations such as Facebook are not only taxed in their home country, but also where they actually do business.

Poland now insists on linking both parts by law - even if there is only a legal text in the EU for the first part with the 15 percent.

Firm assurances that the second part would follow were not enough for the government in Warsaw, Le Maire said on Tuesday.

dpa

Source: merkur

All news articles on 2022-04-05

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