Compliance
European Lawmakers Step Up Pressure Against "Shell Companies"
![European Lawmakers Step Up Pressure Against](https://wealthbriefing.com/cms/images/app/European%20Union/EuropeanUnionparliament.jpg)
This news service understands that there are concerns that a crackdown on shell companies could lead to them moving to jurisdictions, including the UK and other non-EU places, such as the Channel Islands or Isle of Man.
The European Parliament has voted to give measures against
so-called shell corporations more power, a move that could drive
holding companies outside the EU.
Last week a plenary session of the parliament voted to widen the
scope of the European Commission's (EC’s) draft unshell
directive.
The directive, published in draft form in December 2021, is to be
implemented as the third revision of the EU Anti-Tax Avoidance
Directive (ATAD). The directive is aimed at shell companies that
are used by individuals or companies for tax avoidance purposes,
registered in no- or low-tax jurisdictions or jurisdictions where
taxes can easily be circumvented (source: EU
Parliament).
From WealthBriefing’s understanding from those working
in the space, a directive, if it takes effect, might push holding
company structures outside the EU to jurisdictions such as the UK
and the Channel Islands.
According to a report from the Society of Trust and Estate
Practitioners, the directive’s measures fall into two categories:
a set of indicators for deciding whether a given entity is a
shell and a set of sanctions to be applied to companies deemed to
be shells. The parliament’s amendment slightly lowers the
thresholds below which a company is exempt from the draft
directive's reporting requirements and requires companies subject
to the reporting requirements to provide more detailed
information.
Members of the European Parliament adopted their opinion
last Tuesday by 637 votes in favour, two against and six
abstentions amending the Commission’s proposal for a directive
setting out criteria for determining a shell company used for tax
avoidance and tax evasion, the ensuing penalties as well as
reporting requirements.
“This is another step in the EU strategy to tackle tax evasion
and aggressive avoidance,” Sophie Limbioul, senior manager,
private clients and family offices Romandie, PwC Switzerland,
said in a note.
“For the directive to be implemented there must be unanimous
agreement, and we are not there yet. However, in the meantime we
see that third-party service providers across the financial
services industry are effectively doing the job of the directive
by already asking their customer base to confirm that there is
substance to their entities (not just limited to European
companies) and actively choosing not to work with customers using
entities based in certain jurisdictions,” she continued.