OECD releases 2500+ pages of public comments to its pillar one “unified approach” for taxing multinationals

By Julie Martin, MNE Tax

The OECD on November 15 published more than 300 comment letters that respond to its request for feedback on the Secretariat’s proposal for a “unified approach” to pillar one.

The OECD Secretariat’s proposal, released October 9, aims to expedite agreement among a coalition of 130+ nations that make up the “Inclusive Framework on BEPS” on an update to the international tax rules. The plan would allocate a greater share of multinational group profits and related taxing rights to countries where a multinational’s customers or users reside to yield fairer taxation of multinational digital and tech companies.

The written feedback on the OECD plan was submitted by large multinationals; trade associations; law, accounting, and advisory firms; academics; intergovernmental organizations; and civil society groups. More than 2,500 pages of comments were released.

The UN Committee of Experts on International Cooperation in Tax Matters was among the commentators. The UN committee said that the OECD Secretariat should make a greater effort to include developing countries in the international tax rewrite decision-making process and pay full attention to their interests.

The committee said that the OECD proposal is too complex and suggested that the proposal be remodeled into something simpler, perhaps using withholding taxes. Moreover, the plan’s exclusion of businesses that are not consumer-facing and the revenue threshold should be reconsidered. Further, the UN committee said that the unified approach’s “Amount B” should be determined “fairly and carefully” to not harm developing nations’ interests.

Several industry trade groups advocated for pillar-one carve outs for their members. In this category were trade associations representing the insurance industry, such as the Insurance Company Working Group on BEPS; the financial services industry, such as the Association for Financial Markets in Europe; and natural resources industries, such as the Mining Institute of Canada.

The World Customs Organization asked the OECD to take into account the effect of the proposal on customs valuation.

In its written submission, BIAC said that its membership was unable to reach a consensus on the scope and appropriateness of the “consumer-facing” exception. The group said also that simplification measures should be considered, such as having the multinational pay Amount A to its parent jurisdiction for onward transmission to other countries. The group also suggested that the new rules provide for the sole use of the parent jurisdiction’s accounting standards rather than the use of accounting standards for all countries entitled to Amount A.

BIAC further said that overlaps between Amounts A, B, and C must be addressed to avoid double taxation of the same profit. Further, countries must adopt dispute resolution procedures similar to mandatory binding arbitration as a part of the plan, the business group said. Substantive changes to the mutual agreement procedure in tax treaties are a “crucial” component of any agreement, BIAC said.

In its comments, Amazon expressed support for the unified approach and laid out seven principles that it believed should guide the international tax reform solution. Among these was a request that the rules be applied fairly to loss-making businesses and that the new enhanced nexus rules not be extended to indirect taxes.

The OECD will hear from a selection of these commentators at a public hearing, slated for November 21–22 in Paris. The event will also be broadcast live.

According to the hearing agenda, the first day of the consultation will be devoted to introductory remarks and discussion of the scope of the proposal, the new nexus rules, calculation of group profits for Amount A, and elimination of double taxation.

The second day will cover Amount B (fixed remuneration), and Amount C, on prevention and resolution of cross-border tax disputes.

The comments to the secretariat’s proposal can be downloaded at this link  (Zip file, 169mb).

Julie Martin

Julie Martin

Founder & Editor at MNE Tax

Julie Martin is the founder of MNE Tax. She edits the publication and regularly contributes articles on new developments in cross-border business taxation.

Julie has worked as a tax journalist and editor for more than 13 years. Prior to that, she worked as an in-house tax attorney in New York. She also holds an LLM in taxation from New York University School of Law.

Julie can be reached at [email protected].

Julie Martin
Julie can be reached at [email protected].

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