Written answers

Thursday, 16 June 2022

Photo of John LahartJohn Lahart (Dublin South West, Fianna Fail)
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32. To ask the Minister for Finance when planned changes to corporation tax will be implemented; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [30136/22]

Photo of Matt ShanahanMatt Shanahan (Waterford, Independent)
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56. To ask the Minister for Finance his views that the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development global tax agreement which Ireland recently signed up to may be in trouble; if he is concerned that policymakers in both parts of the US and parts of Europe are already finding it difficult to comply with the agreement which is expected to be implemented in Ireland in 2023 and could result in Ireland’s corporate tax rate rising from 12.5% to 15% in line with over 130 countries worldwide; and if he will make a statement on the matter. [31009/22]

Photo of Paschal DonohoePaschal Donohoe (Dublin Central, Fine Gael)
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I propose to take Questions Nos. 32 and 56 together.

I understand that the planned changes to Corporation tax to which the Deputy is referring in his question are those which the OECD/G20 Inclusive Framework on BEPS met to agree last October through a two-pillar solution to address tax challenges arising from the digitalisation of the economy.

Pillar One will see a reallocation of 25% of residual profits to the jurisdiction of the consumer. The scope is confined to multinational groups with turnover in excess of €20 billion annually. Residual profit is profit greater than 10% of turnover.

Pillar Two provides that the minimum effective rate is 15% for multinational enterprises with annual turnover in excess of €750m.

It is expected that the Agreement will bring long-term stability and certainty to the international tax framework arising from discussions which have taken place.

The implementation timeframe for both Pillars is ambitious as acknowledged recently by the Secretary General of the OECD. However, I am fully committed to delivering both pillars of the agreement as soon as possible.

Intensive work is ongoing, both at the OECD and EU, to reach agreement on the technical detail required in both Pillars to ensure that these complex provisions are transposed robustly and in co-ordination by all signatories to the agreement.

An intensive programme of meetings is ongoing at the OECD to ensure that the Agreement can be translated into rules which ultimately can become legislation. My officials and those of the Revenue Commissioners are endeavouring to shape the rules to ensure that they provide the necessary tax certainty, are administrable for business and tax administrations, and remain broadly faithful to the October Agreement.

On Pillar One the OECD have divided the work into 14 building blocks necessary to implement Pillar One. Each block is sent to public consultation as part of the development process and these elements will eventually form the Pillar One Model Rules.

These model rules, which will govern the reallocation of taxing rights to market jurisdictions, are to be delivered through a Multilateral Convention. This will be both legally and legislatively challenging to develop and deliver.

Pillar Two is more advanced. The OECD published Model Rules in December 2021 and published a commentary to these rules in March of this year. The Model Rules provide an important framework to assist individual jurisdictions to implement the Global Minimum Effective Tax Rate in a coordinated and consistent manner in accordance with the terms of the Agreement.

Work is ongoing on the OECD’s Implementation Framework to deal with further implementation issues, such as co-existence with the US GILTI regime, and the GloBE information return.

In the EU, work on delivering Pillar Two into legislation through the Minimum Tax Directive is very advanced. I am fully supportive of the efforts of the French presidency towards reaching unanimous agreement of the Directive and am optimistic that unanimous agreement can be reached at ECOFIN soon.

The EU Minimum Tax Directive now provides for implementation by 31 December 2023, which is in line with the OECD agreement of 2023 implementation. This remains faithful to the original deadline, while recognising the complex work required of both tax administrations and businesses in order to introduce and operate these rules effectively.

Domestically, a public consultation has recently been launched on the implementation of Pillar Two into Ireland’s tax code and I encourage all interested parties to engage with this consultation.

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