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Document 52012DC0351
COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL on concrete ways to reinforce the fight against tax fraud and tax evasion including in relation to third countries
COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL on concrete ways to reinforce the fight against tax fraud and tax evasion including in relation to third countries
COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL on concrete ways to reinforce the fight against tax fraud and tax evasion including in relation to third countries
/* COM/2012/0351 final */
COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL on concrete ways to reinforce the fight against tax fraud and tax evasion including in relation to third countries /* COM/2012/0351 final */
COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO
THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT AND THE COUNCIL on concrete ways to reinforce the fight
against tax fraud and tax evasion including in relation to third countries 1. Introduction Tax fraud and tax evasion are limiting the
capacity of Member States to raise revenues and to carry out their economic
policy. In times of fiscal consolidation, when many Member States need to cut
expenditure and increase revenues, the conduct of fiscal policy is made even
more difficult by tax fraud and evasion[1].
Estimates of the size of the shadow economy in the EU of nearly one fifth of
GDP, gives a first indication of the extent of the problem. Figure 1: Estimate of the size of the
shadow economy in 2011 (% of GDP)[2] Also, tens of billions of euro remain
offshore, often unreported and untaxed, reducing national tax revenues. Given
the order of magnitude, stepping up the fight against tax fraud and evasion is
not only an issue of revenue, but also of fairness. It is important to remember
that the vast majority of EU taxpayers generally seek to comply with their tax
obligations. Particularly in these difficult economic times, these honest
taxpayers should not suffer additional tax increases to make up for revenue
losses incurred due to tax fraudsters and evaders. The focus should therefore
be on tackling fraud and evasion. The present communication does not address
undeclared work as such, although it may occur in conjunction with the evasion
of indirect taxes; the approach to tackle undeclared work was set out in COM
(2007) 628. The benefits from addressing these problems can be significant.
Estimates show that recent voluntary compliance initiatives as a result of a
G20 initiative alone raised 10 billion euro over 2 years for the EU Member
States concerned[3].
By reducing fraud and evasion Member States can increase tax revenues which
will also give them more leeway to restructure their tax systems in a way that
better promotes growth as outlined in the 2012 Annual Growth Survey[4]. In recent years, the challenge posed by tax
fraud and evasion has increased considerably. The globalisation of the economy,
technological developments, the internationalisation of fraud, and the
resulting interdependence of Member States' tax authorities reveal the limits
of strictly national approaches and reinforce the need for joint action. On 2nd March 2012, the European
Council therefore called on the Council and the Commission to rapidly develop
concrete ways to improve the fight against tax fraud and tax evasion, including
in relation to third countries and to report by June 2012. In April the
European Parliament adopted a resolution echoing the urgent need for action in
this area. An increase in efficiency and effectiveness
of tax collection is, thus, desperately needed. The problems posed by tax fraud
and evasion must be tackled at three levels: firstly, the tax collection within
each Member State must be improved. Secondly, there is a need to enhance
cross-border cooperation between Member States' tax administrations. Thirdly,
the EU needs to have a clear and coherent policy vis-à-vis third countries in
order to promote its standards at international level and ensure a level
playing field. Co-operating at EU level has an added value in each of these
three fields. This Communication outlines how tax
compliance can be improved and fraud and evasion reduced, through a better use
of existing instruments and the adoption of pending Commission proposals. It
also identifies areas where further legislative action or coordination would
benefit the EU and Member States. Such action should not only target fraudulent
activity and tax evasion but also aggressive tax planning. Aggressive tax
planning includes the use of artificial operations or structures and the
exploitation of mismatches between tax systems with the effect of undermining
Member States' tax rules and exacerbating the loss of tax revenues. 2. More effective tax
collection within Member States Member States have full sovereignty over
the collection of their taxes, the functioning and consistency of their
tax laws and tax administrations, tax collection and the fight against tax
fraud. However, national action (or lack of
action) has a direct impact on the functioning of the internal market at large,
as it can distort competition among EU businesses, and on the ability of Member
States to meet the commitments of the Stability and Growth Pact. The importance of tax policy for fiscal
consolidation and growth has been clearly recognised in the process of the
European Semester[5]
and the Euro Plus Pact[6].
This has also been emphasised by the G20. Fair and ambitious fiscal
consolidation is impaired by inefficient and ineffective tax collection. The broad analysis carried out by the
Commission in the context of the European Semester and translated into
recommendations both to individual Member States and the Eurozone has revealed
that for many Member States there are real and substantial problems of tax
evasion sometimes linked to poor administrative capacity. Country-specific recommendations
regarding these issues were addressed to 10 Member States[7] . Reinforcing the fight against fraud and
evasion as specified in some Country Specific recommendations will increase tax
revenues and therefore support the necessary structural reforms. It may also
help Member States to implement other growth friendly tax related
recommendations, including reducing tax compliance costs for businesses. Data on the VAT revenue ratio in Member
States illustrate the extent of under-collected revenue. While VAT reduced
rates and exemptions offer a partial explanation for this gap, it is also due
to tax evasion that Member States collect only part of the theoretical VAT
revenue. Figure 2: Actual VAT revenue in 2010 (%
of theoretical revenue at standard rates)[8] The problems which tax administrations face
are also evidenced by the substantial administrative costs related to tax
collection. Figure 3: Administrative costs/net
revenue collections in 2009 (costs in EUR per 100 EUR of revenue)[9] In this context, specific technical assistance programmes are
already available[10]
and the Commission invites Member States to rely on them when designing
programmes to improve the functioning of their tax administrations, enhancing
administrative capacity and tax compliance. For the future, there is a need for
an effective successor to the FISCALIS programme, to improve the proper
functioning of the taxation systems in the internal market. The Commission also believes it important
to continue to assist Member States in identifying inherent weaknesses in their
tax administrations and assist them in tackling specific problems, ensure
effective exchange of best practices and also by developing benchmarking
methodologies to assess the core functions of tax collection and controls. 3. Better cross-border
cooperation between EU tax administrations The European integration process has led to
closer integration of the economies of all Member States with high volumes of
cross-border transactions and the rolling back of cross-border transaction
costs and risks. This, in turn has posed additional challenges for national tax
administrations in terms of co-operation and exchange of information. 3.1. Best use of existing legal
instruments Cross-border cooperation between Member
States' tax administrations can only be truly effective if there is mutual
trust and solidarity between Member States. Only when Member States are
prepared to assist each other can they expect to reap the full benefits of
cooperation. The experience of the Savings Directive[11] demonstrates the benefits of
such cooperation. On average more than 4 million records are sent each year
from source countries to residence countries representing on average 20 billion
euro of savings income. A series of important legal instruments for
administrative cooperation have been adopted in recent years for both direct
and indirect taxes[12].
However, their effective and comprehensive use by Member States is still to be
attained. The Commission is assisting Member States
in their efforts by providing them with the practical tools and instruments
they need to engage in effective administrative cooperation. The Commission has
already developed electronic formats for exchange of information and secure
channels of communication will need to be continuously updated and extended to
cover other types of income. The Commission will closely monitor the correct
application by all Member States of the commonly agreed rules and procedures. 3.2. Further concrete ways to
enhance cooperation 3.2.1. Strengthening existing
tools On 13 November 2008, the Commission adopted
an amending proposal to the Savings Directive with a view to closing existing
loopholes and better preventing tax evasion. The two major loopholes identified
were the use of untaxed intermediary structures to obscure the actual
beneficial ownership and the use of innovative financial instruments and other
products (i.e. structured retail products and insurance wrappers) not covered
by the Directive. The second review of the Savings Directive
confirmed the widespread use of untaxed offshore structures interposed between
the payer and the ultimate beneficiary in order to obscure the actual
beneficial ownership: 35% of the non-bank deposits in Member States (65% for
deposits in Savings Agreements countries) are held by such structures located
in offshore jurisdictions. The review also revealed that the market for
structured financial products (EUR 767,3 billion current outstanding amount of
sales) has been increasing annually at more than 30% on average in recent
years. The content of the Amending Proposal is essentially agreed by Member
States and it is vital that these changes are now adopted without delay. The EU
must demonstrate its ability to address these problems which will also put it
in a stronger position to seek equivalent improvements from other countries. 3.2.2. Enhancing exchange of
information Exchange of information gives tax
administrations invaluable information on income received and assets owned by
their taxpayers that can also be particularly useful for risk analysis purposes
and that can serve as an incentive to voluntary compliance. The use of
automatic exchange of information should be promoted where it is the most
useful. The Commission has developed computerised formats for savings income
and is currently developing new formats for income covered by Directive 2011/16
in order to implement secure and enhanced automatic exchange of information
within the EU. The EU has a key role to play in promoting its
standard of automatic exchange of information so as to give support to
developing international standards of transparency and exchange of information
in tax matters. To ensure that information exchanged can be
used immediately, it is essential to improve the identification of taxpayers.
The experience of Member States shows that information can be far better
matched when a Tax Identification Number (TIN) is communicated and used as a
unique identifier. The Commission will therefore carry out an impact assessment
with a view to proposing, where appropriate, a European TIN assigned to each
taxpayer engaged in cross-border activity. Giving Member States' tax
administrations direct access to relevant areas of each other's national data
bases together with an extension of the scope of automated access in the VAT
area should also be envisaged. 3.2.3. Tackling trends and schemes
of tax fraud and tax evasion It is essential to develop and share tools,
systems and working methods that identify trends and schemes involving tax
fraud and evasion, as well as individual cross-border fraudsters. To meet this
objective, the Commission will pursue work on rapidly extending EUROFISC and
its Early Warning System to the direct tax area and on enhancing Risk
Management techniques. The Commission will also propose a Quick Reaction
Mechanism on VAT fraud cases. The Commission also aims to develop a
strategy for tackling aggressive tax planning. It will examine ways to improve
access to information on money flows, making it easier to trace significant payments
made through off-shore bank accounts. Consideration should be given to the
creation, within the EU, of teams of auditors dedicated to cross-border tax
fraud. More regular joint audits should be promoted through extensive use of
the existing legal provisions on simultaneous controls and the presence of
officials of a Member State in another Member State[13]. 3.2.4. Ensuring high levels of
taxpayers' compliance Improving taxpayer compliance[14] is an important element of an
effective strategy to combat tax fraud and evasion. To enhance compliance both
in internal and cross-border situations taxpayers must be better informed about
EU and Member States' tax rules. Tools such as a single TAX WEBPORTAL for all
taxes and taxpayers and a one-stop shop for non-resident taxpayers in Member
States would make it easier for the taxpayers concerned to meet their tax
obligations. In the field of VAT the Commission is setting up a dialogue
platform, the so-called "EU VAT Forum", involving Tax Authorities and
business representatives. This Forum will create the conditions for a smoother
functioning of the present VAT system aimed at enhancing voluntary compliance. Taxpayers' compliance could be encouraged
in various ways. One way to increase tax compliance is to decrease its costs
and complexity for taxpayers. The administrative costs for business of
complying with the tax code vary considerably between the Member States. As the
time and costs fall disproportionally on small enterprises, decreasing
administrative complexity and increasing the use of online tools would help tax
collection and increase the competitiveness of many European firms. Tax administrations should also consider
complementing their control approach with a service approach. They could also
develop motivational incentives in the form of voluntary disclosures programmes
and encourage their taxpayers to correct their errors spontaneously. In the
spirit of Corporate Social Responsibility[15],
the Commission will develop a taxpayers' charter. In a globalised world where non-compliant
taxpayers can weigh up their risks of being caught and punished in different
jurisdictions, it is worth considering common minimum rules against tax
fraudsters and evaders with regard to certain types of tax offences and
including administrative or criminal sanctions. The fight against fraud is one
of the priority sectors identified in the Commission Communication “Towards an
EU Criminal Policy”[16].
The Commission will propose rules to strengthen the fight against fraud
affecting the EU financial interest by means of criminal law. 3.2.5. Enhancing tax governance A taxpayer committing VAT fraud will
often also evade corporate or income tax and vice versa. It is therefore
essential to aim for a more joined-up approach between direct and indirect
taxes. Without ignoring the specificities of the different taxes, inspiration
should be drawn from the different mechanisms and working methods in the
respective areas to enhance the efficiency of the fight against tax fraud
across all domains. Greater convergence of tools and systems in
the direct and indirect taxation areas should be promoted, e.g. by providing
the same layout for the common parts of forms. In the medium term, the
Commission will consider a single legal instrument for administrative
cooperation for all types of taxes to ensure full integration and consistency
of the mechanisms for cooperation. As tax fraud is often linked with other
forms of criminal activity it is important to strengthen cooperation between
tax administrations and other authorities, in particular anti-money laundering,
social security and judicial authorities, both at national and international
level. At national level, it is necessary to ensure a satisfactory level of
cooperation between all law enforcement services concerning not only tax fraud
and evasion but also tax related crimes[17]
[18]. Cooperation concerning tax
related crimes can also be ensured through Europol[19]. The Commission can facilitate
coordination in the areas concerned through joint use of its existing programmes
and their successors. 4. Coherent policy vis-à-vis
third countries The EU has a clear and coherent policy on
good governance principles in the tax area (transparency, exchange of
information and fair tax competition) but needs to ensure that this is promoted
in a more consistent manner, not just within the EU but with third countries as
well. 4.1. Ensuring the application
of equivalent standards by third countries The effective and smooth application of the
enhanced measures on taxation of savings at EU level would benefit greatly from
reinforcing the existing equivalent measures with important partners of the EU.
Well-known and marketed financial centres
with strong banking secrecy laws continue to dominate the international
cross-border deposits market. Cayman Islands and Switzerland alone, with a
total of USD 1352 billion deposits by non-banks represent almost 20% of all
worldwide deposits by non-banks. Figure 4 Trends in foreign non bank
deposits with banks in major selected non EU financial centres (millions of US dollars) [20] Accordingly, the Council should swiftly
give a mandate to the Commission and provide support to it in negotiating
amendments to the existing EU savings agreements with Switzerland, Andorra,
Monaco, Liechtenstein and San Marino. Aligning these agreements on the new
standards enforced within the EU, and resulting from the amendments to be made
to the Savings Directive, should allow further progress in the development of
equivalent measures with these jurisdictions. A similar step should be taken
for updating the savings agreements with the relevant dependent or associated
territories. Attention should be given to international developments concerning
financial centres around the world. All of these measures taken together would
greatly strengthen the capacity of Member States to collect taxes on investment
income of their respective residents. Recent bilateral agreements of the UK and
Germany with Switzerland give an indication of untaxed assets held in
Switzerland. These resulted in envisaged upfront payments of CHF 500 million
for the UK and CHF 2 billion for DE. The actual regularisation payments are
expected to surpass CHF1.3 billion for the UK and CHF 4 billion for DE. The UK
estimates a total yield of up to GBP 4-7 billion from the regularisation
payment. This estimation gives an indication of the magnitude of the problem
for the EU as a whole. The findings of the second review of the
Savings Directive show that enhancement of the existing agreements in line with
the proposed amendments to the Directive would make it possible to include
money held in fiduciary accounts. These are accounts holding funds re-deposited
by the investor's bank in its own name in another jurisdiction. In the case of
Switzerland, the funds held on such fiduciary accounts represent 4.5 times the
money held directly by such investors. 4.2. Promoting EU standards at
international level It is important to ensure better coherence
between EU policies in general, so that EU partners under international trade
and cooperation agreements will commit to good governance principles in the tax
area in line with the 2008 Council conclusions[21].
These principles should continue to be included in all relevant EU-level
agreements with third countries as well as promoted through development
cooperation incentives as outlined in the 2009 Communication "Promoting
Good Governance in Tax Matters"[22]
and the 2010 Communication "Tax and Development – Cooperating with
Developing Countries on Promoting Good Governance in Tax Matters"[23]. The Council should also swiftly approve the
draft EU/Liechtenstein agreement on anti-fraud and tax cooperation matters and
should give a mandate to the Commission to open similar negotiations with
Andorra, Monaco, San Marino and Switzerland. In addition, possibilities to
conclude multilateral agreements for administrative cooperation in the field of
indirect taxes with third countries should be explored as well as the
participation of third countries in simultaneous controls. Recent developments at international level
as regards the US Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act (FATCA) open new
perspectives for strengthening automatic information exchange between Member
States and third countries thus improving transparency at a global level. Finally, cooperation with other
international organisations should be improved with a view to promoting common
interests and avoiding overlaps and creating synergies for the benefit of
financial institutions and tax administrations[24].
Member States should be able to use a single set of tools and instruments both
within the EU and in their relations with third countries. To this end, the
Commission is promoting EU advanced practical tools (including electronic
formats) with a view to ensuring their use by non-EU countries particularly in
relations with EU Member States. 4.3. The way forward to deal
with tax havens and aggressive tax planning Tax havens, also sometimes referred to as
'non-cooperative jurisdictions' are commonly understood to be jurisdictions
which are able to finance their public services with no or nominal income taxes
and offer themselves as places to be used by non-residents to escape taxation
in their country of residence. The OECD has identified three typical
'confirming' features of a tax haven: (i) lack of effective exchange of
information, (ii) lack of transparency, and (iii) no requirement for
substantial activities. In addition they often offer preferential tax treatment
to non-residents in order to attract investment from other countries. Tax havens
therefore compete unfairly and make it difficult for 'non' tax havens to
collect a fair amount of taxation from their residents. Intensive work is on-going to eliminate
many of the harmful features of tax havens. Important progress has been made
through the almost universal adoption of strong rules on information exchange
on request and transparency following the successful re-launching of the OECD
Global Forum on Transparency and Exchange of Information for Tax Purposes.
However, although many former 'tax havens' have committed to these principles
whether these commitments have been put into practice is only just being
reviewed. Furthermore the Forum does not consider the question of 'fair tax
competition', a principle which the EU upholds internally via the Code of
Conduct for business taxation[25].
Promoting such a concept to third countries is relevant both for the OECD and
the EU. Tax Havens continue to potentially damage
the interests of Member States. The burden of additional compliance costs due
to uncoordinated actions by Member States to protect their tax bases falls on
all taxpayers. Similarly when tax revenues are lost as tax base has been
diverted to tax havens then all tax payers suffer when tax rates are raised to
make up for eroding tax bases. Over and above specific issues linked to
tax havens, the Commission's aim is to contribute to a fair and sound tax
environment in the EU (for Member States, taxpayers, and investors) where
erosion of tax bases is efficiently tackled (within the EU and in relation to
third countries). It is important that the ensuing advantages are not
undermined through action taken by third countries. Possible policy responses
to achieve this are currently being evaluated with the aim of a presenting an
action plan towards the end of this year. The aim is to establish a set of
measures, procedures and tools for coordinated action. This could include a
mixture of defensive measures or sanctions against countries which practice
unfair tax competition and incentives for those countries to cease such
practices. The focus will be on coordinated measures. The Communication will
also address issues of aggressive tax planning. 5. Conclusion There is a clear political will, as
expressed by heads of state and government on 2 March 2012, to prioritise
concrete actions to fight fraud and tax evasion. This now needs to be
translated into concrete action. This Communication provides a first response
to the European Council's request by outlining the different levels at which
action is needed and by giving broad orientations on the issues which merit
further consideration. The Commission hopes to advance these discussions both
at Council level and through the Tax Policy Group[26]. A swift adoption of the
revision of the Savings directive, and an immediate agreement on giving the
negotiating mandate to the Commission, would be a first step in this direction. The European semester process provides an
ideal opportunity to examine tax issues in the overall context of the economic
development of the EU and to integrate tax policy in the push for growth. The
Commission will continue its effort to support Member States' consolidation and
pro-growth strategies. Before the end of 2012 the Commission
intends to come forward with an action plan based on a proportionate impact
assessment, which will identify specific measures which could be developed
rapidly if the appropriate political priority is given. The presentation of
this plan is foreseen together with the initiative on tax havens and aggressive
tax planning. This action plan will set out concrete steps to enhance
administrative cooperation and
will support the development of the existing good governance policy, the wider
issues of interaction with tax havens and of tackling aggressive tax planning and
other aspects, including tax-related crimes. [1] Tax fraud is a form of deliberate evasion of tax
which is generally punishable under criminal law. The term includes situations
in which deliberately false statements are submitted or fake documents are produced.
Tax evasion generally comprises illegal arrangements where liability to tax is
hidden or ignored, i.e. the taxpayer pays less tax than he is legally obligated
to pay by hiding income or information from the tax authorities. [2] Source: Schneider, F. (2012), "Size and
development of the Shadow Economy from 2003 to 2012: some new facts". The figures contained in this study are necessarily based on
assumptions and should therefore be considered cautiously as their certainty is
not demonstrated. [3] OECD: The Era of Bank Secrecy is Over; the G20/OECD
process is delivering results, 26 October 2011 [4] Commission Communication on the Annual Growth Survey
2012 – COM(2011) 815 final of 25 November 2011 – 17229/11; Council conclusions
of 16 February 2012 (6353/1/12 Rev.1) [5] Commission Communication on the Annual Growth Survey
2012 – COM(2011) 815 final of 25 November 2011 – 17229/11; Council conclusions
of 16 February 2012 (6353/1/12 Rev.1) [6] Council conclusions of 16 February 2012 (6404/1/12
Rev.1) [7] Country-specific
recommendations on these issues have been addressed to Bulgaria, Cyprus, Czech
Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Italy, Lithuania, Malta, Poland, Slovakia. Note
that Member States currently benefiting from financial assistance under the
European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF), the European
Financial Stabilisation Mechanism (EFSM) or under the
provisions of Article 143 of the Treaty are recommended to implement the
measures laid down in their respective
Implementing Decisions and further specified
in their Memorandums of Understanding and
possible subsequent supplements. This concerns Greece, Ireland, Portugal and
Romania [8] Source: European Commission; “Taxation trends in the
European Union”, 2012 edition. [9] Source: OECD. The table gives data for 23 Member
States. Data for CY, EL, LT and SK are not available or under validation. [10] Decision N° 1482/2007/EC of the European Parliament and
of the Council of 11 December 2007 establishing a Community programme to
improve the operation of taxation systems in the internal market (Fiscalis
2013) and repealing Decision N° 2235/2002/EC (O.J. L 330 of 15.12.2007, P. 1) [11] Council Directive 2003/48/EC of 3 June 2003 on taxation
of savings income in the form of interest payments (OL L 157 of 26.6.2003,
p.38) [12] Council Directive 2010/24/EU of 16 March concerning
mutual assistance for the recovery of claims relating to taxes, duties and
other measures (OJ L 84 of 31.3.2010, P. 1); Council Regulation N° 904/2010/EU
of 7 October 2010 on administrative cooperation and combating fraud in the
field of value added tax (OJ L 268 of 12.10.2010, P. 1); Council Directive 2011/16/EU
of 15 February 2011 on administrative cooperation in the field of taxation and
repealing Directive 77/799/EEC (OJ L 64 of 11.3.2011, P.1); Council Regulation
N° 389/2012/EU of 2 May 2012 on administrative cooperation in the field of
excise duties and repealing Regulation (EC) N° 2073/2004 (OJ L 121 of 8.5.2012,
P. 1) [13] Article 7 of Directive N° 2010/24/EU; Articles 28, 29
and 30 of Regulation N° 904/2010/EU; Articles 11 and 12 of Directive N° 2011/16/EU;
Articles 12 and 13 of Regulation N° 389/2012/EU [14] Tax compliance is the degree to which a taxpayer
complies (or fails to comply) with the tax rules of his country, for example by
declaring income, filing a return, and paying the tax due in a timely manner. [15] Communication on a renewed EU strategy 2011-14 for
Corporate Social Responsibility – COM (2011) 681 final of 25.10.2011 [16] COM (2011) 573 final of 20.9.2011 [17] Money laundering, terrorist financing and criminal
schemes relating to Missing Trader Intra Community Frauds (MTIC), including VAT
carousel fraud and criminal investment in the EU Emission Trading Scheme. [18] The revised FATF standards adopted in February 2012
added tax crime as a predicate offence to the money laundering and terrorist
financing offence [19] Europol allows identifying the organisers of tax
related crimes and dismantling criminal networks. [20] Source: BIS public aggregate data [21] Conclusions of the ECOFIN Council meeting on 14 May
2008 (Press Release 8850/08) [22] COM (2009) 201 final of 28.4.2009 [23] COM (2010) 163 final of 21.4.2010 [24] The EU participates actively in other international
forums such as the OECD, the International Organisation for Tax Administration
(IOTA), the Inter American Center of Tax Administrations (CIAT), the
International Tax Dialogue (ITD), the International Tax Compact (ITC), and the
African Tax Administration Forum (ATAF) [25] Conclusions of the ECOFIN Council meeting on 1 December
1997 concerning taxation policy (OJ C 2 of 6.1.98, P.1) [26] The Tax Policy Group is a permanent high-level group,
established in 1996, for strategic and comprehensive discussion on tax policy
issues at a European level chaired by the Commissioner responsible for taxation
matters