EU opens state aid probe into UK tax scheme for multinationals

Reuters  |  BRUSSELS 

By Julia Fioretti

BRUSSELS (Reuters) - The European Commission is investigating whether a British exemption for multinational companies amounts to illegal state aid, the EU's Competition Commissioner said.

At stake is a 2013 overhaul of Britain's anti-corporate avoidance regime, conducted by the then-Conservative-led government to attract companies to set up headquarters in and to discourage companies moving off-shore.

As part of that change, introduced an exemption to its Controlled Foreign Company (CFC) rules.

CFC rules are usually intended to stop companies shifting untaxed profits into havens but London introduced an exemption for interest income earned by offshore subsidiaries which campaigners said was a major loophole.

"Rules targeting avoidance cannot go against their purpose and treat some companies better than others," Competition Commissioner Margrethe Vestager said.

"This is why we will carefully look at an exemption to the UK's anti-avoidance rules for certain transactions by multinationals, to make sure it does not breach state aid rules," she said in a statement.

A spokeswoman for Prime Minister Theresa May said does not believe its laws are incompatible with rules, but would cooperate with the Commission.

Vestager has crusaded against what she calls unfair benefits granted to some firms in countries, notably ordering Ireland to recover up to 13 billion euros from Apple.

The measure was successful in encouraging a number of big companies to move their headquarters or residence to

A 2014 investigation showed that while the changes had helped companies cut bills, the relocations brought few jobs to (http://www.com/article/2014/06/09/us-britain-usa-tax-insight-idUSKBN0EK0BF20140609)

CFC rules work by re-allocating profits shifted by a parent company to a subsidiary in a haven, back to the parent. Germany and France have strong CFC rules, accountants say, but the UK's current regime is seen as one of the weaker ones in Europe.

The Commission said it had doubts whether the exemption on finance income earned by offshore subsidiaries complies with state aid rules forbidding preferential treatment of some companies over others.

A Commission spokesman said it was too early to say how much might be asked to recover from the companies benefiting from the exemption, and would not be drawn on the possible impact of Brexit on the investigation.

The state aid investigation could extend beyond Britain's exit from the in March 2019, but the Commission spokesman Alexander Winterstein said that as long as the remained part of the it had to abide by the rules.

"As long as a member state is a member of the single market, it is subject to competition rules including those on state aid, and everything else will be part of the negotiations which are ongoing so I will not enter into speculation on this," he said at a daily briefing.

(Additional reporting by Tom Bergin in London; editing by Mark Heinrich and Jane Merriman)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, October 26 2017. 21:29 IST