CbC reporting: Difference between revisions
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Taking the UK as an example, where CbC reporting has been implemented with effect from 2016 | Taking the UK as an example, where CbC reporting has been implemented with effect from 2016: | ||
UK CbC reporting applies to all UK-headquartered multinationals and UK subsidiaries of foreign-owned multinationals. | UK CbC reporting applies to all UK-headquartered multinationals and UK subsidiaries of foreign-owned multinationals. |
Revision as of 11:51, 24 August 2017
Tax.
'CbC' means 'country-by-country' reporting in relation to tax.
Taking the UK as an example, where CbC reporting has been implemented with effect from 2016:
UK CbC reporting applies to all UK-headquartered multinationals and UK subsidiaries of foreign-owned multinationals.
These companies are required to provide the UK tax authorities (HMRC) with information about their global activities, profits and taxes annually for each tax jurisdiction in which they do business.
"HMRC thinks [CbC reporting] will influence behaviour and not just disclosure."
Paul Johns, director treasury and tax, ISG plc.
See also
- Base erosion and profit shifting
- Common Consolidated Corporate Tax Base
- Corporation Tax
- Diverted profits tax
- Fixed-ratio method
- HMRC
- Multinational corporation/company
- Worldwide interest cap
- Tax avoidance
- Transfer pricing
- Double taxation