Forum on Harmful Tax Practices
From ACT Wiki
Tax - anti-avoidance.
(FHTP).
The Forum on Harmful Tax Practices is the body established by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) to review the compliance of tax jurisdictions with its guidelines on transparency and other aspects of tax structuring.
Swift progress continues
- "Governments are continuing to make swift progress in bringing their preferential tax regimes in compliance with the OECD/G20 BEPS standards to improve the international tax framework.
- Today the Inclusive Framework released the updates to the results for preferential regime reviews conducted by the Forum on Harmful Tax Practices (FHTP) in connection with BEPS Action 5:
- Four new regimes were designed to comply with FHTP standards, meeting all aspects of transparency, exchange of information, ring fencing and substantial activities and are found to be not harmful (Lithuania, Luxembourg, Singapore, Slovak Republic).
- Four regimes were abolished or amended to remove harmful features (Chile, Malaysia, Turkey and Uruguay).
- A further three regimes do not relate to geographically mobile income and/or are not concerned with business taxation, as such posing no BEPS Action 5 risks and have therefore been found to be out of scope (Kenya and two Viet Nam regimes).
- Eleven new preferential regimes are identified since the last update, bringing the total to 175 regimes in over 50 jurisdictions considered by the FHTP since the creation of the Inclusive Framework. Of the 175, 31 regimes have been changed; 81 regimes require legislative changes which are in progress; 47 regimes have been determined to not pose a BEPS risk; 4 have harmful or potentially harmful features and 12 regimes are still under review."
- OECD - 17 May 2018
See also
- Base erosion and profit shifting (BEPS)
- CbC reporting
- Common Consolidated Corporate Tax Base
- Diverted profits tax
- G20
- Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
- Tax avoidance
- Preferential tax regime
- Worldwide interest cap