Jean-Claude Juncker
breaks silence to say revelations are personally damaging as calls increase for
harmonisation of EU tax rules
Kim Willsher in Paris
The Guardian, Thursday 11 December 2014 / http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/dec/11/luxembourg-tax-files-juncker-weakened-scandal
European Commission president Jean-Claude
Juncker has admitted that his position has been weakened by a scandal exposing Luxembourg ’s
role in corporate tax avoidance schemes.
Juncker survived a no-confidence vote in
the European Parliament last month following revelations that companies such as
Shire and Icap engaged in legal manoeuvres to reduce their tax bills by
channelling money through Luxembourg
while he was finance minister and prime minister of the Grand Duchy.
Since the names of more multinationals
including Disney emerged this week – suggesting Luxembourg encouraged industrial
scale tax avoidance – Juncker has been struggling to keep a distance from the
scandal.
In an interview with the French
left-leaning daily newspaper Libération in the wake of the latest revelations,
he broke his silence to admit it was personally damaging.
“Subjectively speaking, I’ve nothing to
blame myself for any more than others have, and I should add that European
governments have said nothing following these articles. But, objectively speaking,
I am weakened because LuxLeaks suggests that I took part in operations that did
not follow basic ethical and moral rules.
“There are many doubts in the minds of
numerous Europeans and I’m profoundly sad about that,” Juncker told Libération.
Juncker said that in 1997 he tried to
ensure that a code of good conduct “against harmful tax competition” was
adopted by the European Council of Finance Ministers. He said: “I tried to go
further by proposing a binding directive, but certain countries opposed it.”
He added: “I don’t think I should be
treated in isolation, detached from the actions of others. This is not a noble
excuse, but everyone was at fault because we did not react to the disparity
between national fiscal norms that allow multinational societies to find a
darkroom. The fight against tax evasion and fraud are among my 10 priorities
since my election campaign: so it’s not following the LuxLeaks revelations that
I have suddenly discovered the need for action. Then my sincerity was believed,
now people believe me less, but I will prove that those who believe in me are
right.”
Acknowledging that “the atmosphere” has
changed with regard to taxation, he said: “Public opinion and especially the
victims of austere or rigorous policies no longer accept, and rightly so, the
nonchalance with which other actors in economic and social life are treated.
“As governments now claim that we must
fight against evasion and tax fraud, I trust that nobody will be opposed to the
adoption of tools that allow us to do what we say. A directive on the automatic
exchange of information on planned tax rulings will be presented during the
first half of 2015. We will see who objects to it.”
The latest leak of secret tax documents,
obtained by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists, details
the tax affairs of Koch Industries – the second largest privately owned
business in America
– and FTSE 100 group Reckitt Benckiser.
The European Commission is also looking at
the legality of tax deals offered to some multinationals in countries including
Luxembourg , the Netherlands and Ireland . The scandal has boosted
calls for greater harmonisation of tax rules throughout the European Union.
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