A total of 50 countries and
jurisdictions around the world signed a multilateral agreement
between the competent authorities on the automatic exchange of
financial account information. Of those, 48 countries and territories
will exchange this information as from 2017 and the other two will do
so as from 2018. Another six more countries have committed to the
agreement for 2017 (although they have not signed). In total, 54
countries and territories will exchange information in an automatic
and standardised fashion as from 2017.
The Minister for Economic
Affairs and Competition, Luis de Guindos, and the State Secretary for
the Treasury, Miguel Ferre, attended the event on behalf of Spain,
the latter in the capacity of competent authority. The signing took
place after the plenary meeting of the Global Forum on Transparency
and Exchange of Information for Tax Purposes, held in Berlin on 28
and 29 October.
The multilateral automatic
exchange of financial account information agreement is the result of
a project set in motion by Germany, Spain, France, Italy and the
United Kingdom. The so-called G-5 sent a letter to the European
Commissioner for Tax Affairs in 2013 expressing their intention to
move forward with extending the automatic exchange of financial
account information in line with the FATCA agreement model with the
United States, the development of which they were all actively
involved in. Based on this G-5 project, the OECD approved a model
agreement on this common and standardised system for information
exchange on 17 January 2014.
The signing on Wednesday,
together with the political agreement reached at the EU ECOFIN
Council meeting on 14 October for establishing this automatic
exchange of financial account information system within the European
Union, represents an historic and radical step forward in terms of
transparency and international fiscal control within an economic
climate that is becoming increasingly global and inter-related.
Furthermore, the project remains open to new members and there is no
doubt that new countries and jurisdictions will join in the future.
All types of financial
accounts
The scope of the information
to be exchanged via this system is extremely broad. Specifically, it
covers all types of financial accounts (bank deposits, negotiable
securities, holdings in investments funds, insurance policies,
incomes, etc.) and will include data on balances, amounts received
from incomes or transfers, and identification of the person or entity
holding and effectively controlling the account.
The automatic exchange of
information will begin in 2017 with data on financial accounts that
are open at the end of 2015 and those that are opened subsequently.
The information will be
exchanged on an annual basis and automatically, i.e. without the need
to file a request with the foreign tax authorities for information
regarding an individual case after possible fraud has been detected.
The Spanish Tax Office
(Spanish acronym: AEAT) will hence have access to a system for the
automatic and standardised exchange of information on all sorts of
financial accounts. Appropriate use of the information received on
taxpayers residing in Spain - in coordination with other initiatives
such as the obligation to declare assets located overseas (Form 720)
- represents a decisive step forward in the effective application of
the Spanish tax system, enabling the practice of increased tax bases
declared and fraud by those residents whose tax returns do not
correspond with the assets or incomes they have overseas to be
stamped out.
Furthermore, it will also
lead to an increase in public revenue that will make it possible to
reduce the burden on those taxpayers who comply with their tax
obligations.
Countries and territories
that will exchange information
The 54 countries and
jurisdictions that have committed to exchanging information as from
2017 are as follows (six of them did not sign on Wednesday in
Berlin): Germany, Argentina, Barbados, Belgium, Bulgaria,
Cyprus, Colombia, South Korea, Croatia, Denmark, Slovakia, Slovenia,
Spain, Estonia, Finland, France, Greece, Hungary, India, Ireland,
Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta,
Mauritius, Mexico, Norway, the Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, the
United Kingdom, the Czech Republic, Romania, San Marino, Seychelles,
South Africa, Sweden, Trinidad and Tobago, Curaçao, Greenland, the
Faroe Islands, the United Kingdom Crown Dependencies of Guernsey, the
Isle of Man and Jersey, and the British Overseas Territories of
Anguilla, Bermuda, Gibraltar, the Cayman Islands, the Turks and
Caicos Islands, the British Virgin Islands and Montserrat.
The six countries and
jurisdictions from the above list that did not sign on Wednesday but
have committed to exchanging information as from 2017 are Barbados,
Bulgaria, India, Seychelles, Trinidad and Tobago, and Greenland.
Austria and Aruba also signed up to exchange of information as from
2018 in Berlin on Wednesday.
Pilot scheme between Spain
and Colombia
Furthermore, in compliance
with the mandate from the G-20 Summit in Saint Petersburg in 2013, a
technical assistance mechanism has been established for those
countries and jurisdictions that require assistance in applying the
new standards for the automatic exchange of information. Spain has
adopted a highly pro-active role in this regard and will lead a pilot
scheme for the implementation of the system for the automatic
exchange of information with Colombia.
Berlin Declaration
The group of countries and
jurisdictions that committed to exchanging information as from 2017
issued the Berlin Declaration.
G-5 meeting and erosion of
tax bases
Prior to signing the
multilateral agreement, the G-5 held a meeting at which they debated
how to promote the OECD project to combat tax base erosion and profit
shifting (BEPS) at an EU level.
An initial exchange of
opinions took place on this issue at the ECOFIN Council meeting held
on 14 October. Prior to that, on 16 September, the OECD published a
preliminary series of recommendations on how to tackle this problem
in a coordinated and international fashion.
The Spanish tax reform
currently being passed through Parliament includes regulatory changes
in this regard, such as that referring to the fiscal treatment of
so-called 'hybrid products'.
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