Brussels, 8 December 2022
The European Commission today proposed a series of measures to modernise and make the EU’s Value-Added Tax (VAT) system work better for businesses and more resilient to fraud by embracing and promoting digitalisation. Today’s proposal also aims to address challenges in the area of VAT raised by the development of the platform economy.
Member States lost €93 billion in VAT revenues in 2020 according to the latest VAT Gap figures also published today. Conservative estimates suggest that one quarter of the missing revenues can be attributed directly to VAT fraud linked to intra-EU trade. These losses are clearly detrimental to overall public finances at a time when Member States are adjusting budgets to deal with the social and economic effects of recent energy price spikes and Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine. In addition, VAT arrangements in the EU can still be burdensome for businesses, especially for SMEs, and other companies who operate or are looking to scale-up cross-border.
Key actions proposed today will help Member States collect up to €18 billion more in VAT revenues annually while helping businesses, including SMEs, to grow:
A move to real-time digital reporting based on e-invoicing for businesses that operate cross-border in the EU
The new system introduces real-time digital reporting for VAT purposes based on e-invoicing that will give Member States valuable information they need to step up the fight against VAT fraud, especially carousel fraud. The move to e-invoicing will help reduce VAT fraud by up to €11 billion a year and bring down administrative and compliance costs for EU traders by over €4.1 billion per year over the next ten years. It also makes sure that existing national systems converge across the EU and paves the way for Member States that wish to set up national digital reporting systems for domestic trade in the coming years.
Updated VAT rules for passenger transport and short-term accommodation platforms
Under the new rules, platform economy operators in those sectors will become responsible for collecting and remitting VAT to tax authorities when service providers do not, for example because they are a small business or individual provider. Together with other clarifications, this will ensure a uniform approach across all Member States and contribute to a more level playing field between online and traditional short-term accommodation and transport services. It will also make life easier for SMEs who would otherwise need to understand and comply with the VAT rules in all Member States where they do business. .
The introduction of a single VAT registration across the EU
Building on the already existing ‘VAT One Stop Shop’ model for online shopping companies, today’s proposal would allow businesses selling to consumers in another Member State to register only once for VAT purposes for the entire EU, and to fulfil their VAT obligations via a single online portal in one single language. Estimates show that this move could save businesses, especially SMEs, some €8.7bn in registration and administrative costs over ten years. Further measures to improve the collection of VAT include making the ‘Import One Stop Shop’ mandatory for certain platforms facilitating sales to consumers in the EU.
Next steps
Today’s package of proposals takes the form of amendments to three pieces of EU legislation: the VAT Directive (2006/112/EC), Council Implementing Regulation (EU 282/2011) and the Council Regulation on Administrative Cooperation (EU 904/2010).
The legislative proposals will be sent to the Council for agreement and to the European Parliament and the Economic and Social Committee for consultation.
For more information
Questions and Answers: VAT in the Digital Age
Questions and Answers: VAT GAP 2022 report
Factsheet on VAT in the Digital Age proposals
Factsheet on the VAT Gap 2022 report
More information on the DG TAXUD website on the 2022 VAT Gap report
Quote
EU countries are losing billions every year to VAT fraud, while businesses struggle to comply with outdated VAT rules. Today’s proposals will introduce a new era for the EU’s VAT system, benefitting legitimate businesses, especially SMEs, as well as Member States at a time when public finances are under pressure and financing needs for investments and public services are immense. At the same time, we are introducing a more level playing field between traditional providers and digital platforms in sectors suffering the most from unequal tax treatment.
As we adapt to the digital age, we also need to update our VAT rules to new digital realities, such as the rapid growth of e-commerce and platform working. Digital technologies like e-invoicing are a powerful way to raise VAT revenues while helping our businesses to grow, especially small ones. They can help to fight fraud, saving many billions of euros lost in tax revenues every year and lessening the pressure on stretched public finances. Today’s proposals will simplify and streamline our VAT rules, make life fairer for businesses and promote the digital transition across Europe.
Source – EU Commission
Q&A: The VAT Gap 2022 report
Brussels, 8 December 2022
What is VAT?
Value Added Tax (VAT) is a consumption tax charged on most goods and services consumed in the EU. The tax is levied on the ‘value added’ to the product at each stage of production and distribution. This means that VAT is charged when VAT-registered businesses sell to other businesses (B2B) or to the final consumer (B2C). VAT is intended to be ‘neutral’, in that businesses are able to reclaim any VAT that they pay on goods or services. Ultimately, the final consumer should be the only one who is actually taxed. Businesses are given a VAT identification number and have to show the VAT charged to customers on their invoices.
The VAT system in the EU is governed by a common legal framework: the VAT Directive. Each Member State is responsible for the transposition of these provisions into national legislation and their correct application within its territory. The Commission is responsible for ensuring the correct application of the VAT Directive.
Furthermore, VAT contributes significantly to national budgets that pay for schools, hospitals and other public services in EU Member States. It is also a source of revenue for the EU budget. It is therefore fundamental to work towards improving VAT collection and reducing the VAT Gap.
What is the VAT Gap?
The VAT Gap is the difference between the expected VAT revenue (or ‘VAT Total Tax Liability’ – VTTL) and the amount actually collected, in absolute or percentage terms. The VAT Total Tax Liability is an estimated amount of VAT that is theoretically collectable based on VAT legislation and ancillary regulations. Therefore, the 2022 VAT Gap results are estimates and should not be considered actual measurement of VAT revenues foregone.
In the context of the 2020 EU-wide figures, the amount of €93 billion represents revenues lost to:
- VAT fraud and evasion
- VAT avoidance and optimisation practices
- bankruptcies and financial insolvencies
- miscalculations and administrative errors.
While some revenue losses are impossible to avoid, decisive action and targeted policy responses could make a real difference, particularly when it comes to non-compliance.
What are the main findings of this year’s report?
- The overall VAT gap in the EU in 2020 was estimated at €93 billion or 9.1% of the total expected VAT revenues, a drop of approximately €30 billion compared to the revised 2019 figures. This drop can be explained by an increase in VAT compliance due in large part to the effect of government support measures introduced in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. However, the VAT Gap clearly remains an urgent problem, at a time when governments need sustainable revenues to help weather today’s economic uncertainty. Urgent action is therefore needed to mitigate these losses, especially since estimates suggest that around one quarter of the VAT Gap can be directly attributed to criminal VAT fraud.
- The COVID-19 pandemic led to 19 of 27 Member States experiencing a drop in VAT revenue due to the decrease in overall consumption during the various phases of lockdown. EU-wide revenue decreased by approximately €69 billion or approximately 7% of VAT total tax liabilities. This loss in revenue is also a direct consequence of temporary reductions in the VAT burden to mitigate the economic impact of the pandemic.
- Disparities between Member States remain. In 2020, the estimated VAT Gaps among Member States ranged from 1.3% in Finland, 1.8% in Estonia and 2% in Sweden, to 20.8% in Italy, 24.1% in Malta and 35.7% in Romania. In nominal terms, the largest gaps were recorded in Italy (€26 billion), France (€14 billion) and Germany (€11 billion).
What is being done at EU level to improve the VAT Gap?
The EU has recently taken a number of actions to improve VAT losses, in particular targeting VAT fraud. Member States have already agreed and begun to implement ambitious rules to increase cooperation and information sharing among Member States and with law enforcement agencies. The EU has also supported Member States in working better together in the ‘Eurofisc’ – a network where national anti-fraud officials from the EU and Norway can exchange information resulting from national risk analysis. This exchange leads to early, EU coordinated follow-up actions to stop the detected chains of fraud involving several Member States.
Since 2019, Eurofisc can also carry out central risk-analysis and actively use the Transaction Network Analysis (TNA) tool financed by the Union for rapidly exchanging and jointly processing VAT data so that they can automatically detect cross-border VAT fraud at a much earlier stage. From January 2024 onwards, another electronic analytic tool will become available to Eurofisc which will allow the network to track e-commerce VAT fraud by following data on international payments.
New VAT rules for online shopping also entered into force in 2021 which lifted the VAT exemption for parcels worth less than €22 from entering the EU – a measure that had been extremely susceptible to fraud worth €7 billion a year.
However more needs to be done in order to target VAT carousel fraud at its root. That is why, alongside the 2022 VAT Gap report, the Commission has today launched its proposals for VAT in the Digital Age which should make the system more resilient to fraud, by embracing and promoting tools made possible by the digital transition.
What methodology was used to calculate the VAT Gap?
The study derives the expected VAT revenues (VTTL) for each country from national accounts by mapping information on different VAT rates (standard, reduced and exemptions) onto data available on final and intermediate consumption, along with other information provided by Member States. This means that the quality of the VAT Gap estimates depends on the availability, accuracy and completeness of national accounts data.
When national accounts figures are reliable, the methodology is precise enough to estimate the VAT Gap. The main limitation of the methodology is the quality of the national accounts: collecting better data and relying less on estimations. Member States use different methodologies to estimate the informal economy and to reflect it in their national accounts, thus indirectly affecting the VAT Gap figures.
What causes such differences in the VAT Gap between the Member States?
Variations in the VAT Gap reflect the differences in Member States in terms of the scale of fraud, tax compliance, avoidance, bankruptcies, insolvencies and the performance of the tax administration, among others. The estimates also reflect structural differences in national economies and other variables. Indirect circumstances such as the organisation of national statistics could also have an impact on the size of the VAT Gap.
This year’s report notes that the number of tax administrations monitoring the gap in the EU has grown rapidly in recent years, with 15 Member States now regularly monitoring their VAT compliance gap.
What is the Policy Gap?
The Policy Gap is an indicator of the additional VAT revenue that a Member State could theoretically collect if it applied a uniform VAT rate on all consumption of goods and services supplied for consideration, which would lead to so-called notional ideal VAT revenues. The Policy Gap compares these notional ideal VAT revenues with the expected revenues in the actual current system which allows for reduced rates and exemptions (the VTTL).
The Policy Gap as defined above can in turn be broken down into the Rate Gap and the Exemption Gap. As the terminology suggests, the Rate Gap represents the potential revenue loss due to the existence of reduced rates, whereas the Exemptions Gap represents the potential revenue loss due to the existence of exempted supplies of goods and services.
The Exemption Gap, or the average share of ‘ideal revenue’ lost due to various exemptions is normally the larger of the two and stands at around 36% of the notional ideal VAT revenues in the EU on average. Countries with the highest Exemption Gap in 2020 were Spain (47%), Slovakia, Greece and Finland (all around 42%) while the lowest value was clearly observed in Malta (around 16%).
The largest part of Exemption Gap is composed of exemptions on services that cannot be taxed in principle, such as imputed rents, the provision of public goods by the government, or financial services. The remaining level of so-called ‘actionable’ Exemption Gap is about 6.5% on average.
The Rate Gap, on the other hand, ranges from a low of less than 1% in Denmark, to a high of more than 15% in Austria. The average is 9.9%.
For more information
Questions and Answers: VAT in the Digital Age
Factsheet on VAT in the Digital Age proposals
Factsheet on the VAT Gap 2022 report
More information on the DG TAXUD website on the 2022 VAT Gap report
Q&A: VAT in the digital Age
Brussels, 8 December 2022
Why is the Commission putting forward this package?
The current EU VAT system for intra-EU trade is almost 30 years old and, despite some recent improvements, has not kept pace with technological advances, the digital economy, changes in business models, or globalisation.
At the same time, new figures released today show that the ‘VAT Gap’ (the difference between expected VAT revenues and those actually collected) stood at €93 billion in the EU in 2020. Conservative estimates suggest that one quarter of this figure can be directly attributed to VAT fraud linked to EU-trade, which remains a major problem in the EU. At a time when governments need sustainable revenues to help weather today’s economic uncertainty, we need to urgently accelerate efforts to mitigate these losses.
Businesses who want to take advantage of the Single Market, especially SMEs, currently have to grapple with up to 27 different national VAT systems, each with their own separate reporting obligations. This fragmentation can incur a considerable administrative burden and financial costs for companies trying to grow or dip their toes into other EU markets. At the same time, a lack of clarity on how the online platform economy should be treated for VAT purposes has led to an unfair playing field with the more traditional economy, especially in the accommodation and transport sectors.
To address these issues, the Commission committed in its 2020 Tax Action Plan to bring forward measures to modernise VAT reporting obligations, reinforce Member States’ ability to track cross-border transactions, move towards a single VAT registration in the EU for businesses, and update VAT rules for the platform economy.
What are you proposing?
The VAT in the Digital Age package takes full advantage of technological and digital advances to deliver on an updated VAT system that is more resilient against criminal VAT fraud. It will allow Member States to recoup €11 billion more every year over the next ten years in currently uncollected VAT revenues. At the same time, the proposal will help EU companies, especially SMEs.
In detail, the European Commission has put forward proposals for:
- A move to real-time digital reporting based on e-invoicing for businesses that operate cross-border in the EU and a harmonised framework for domestic transactions: The new system introduces real-time, transaction-based digital reporting for VAT purposes, based on e-invoicing. Once operational, the system will give Member States valuable information they need to control cross-border transactions and step up the fight against cross-border VAT fraud, while reducing administrative and compliance costs for businesses. To make the best use of this data for VAT control and anti-fraud purposes, Member States will also be equipped with the appropriate administrative cooperation tools. The move to e-invoicing will help reduce VAT fraud by up to €11 billion a year.
- Updated VAT rules for passenger transport and short-term accommodation platforms: Under the new rules, platform economy operators themselves will be deemed responsible for collecting VAT when service providers do not (because they are, for example, a small business not usually required to register for VAT) and for remitting this VAT to tax authorities. This, together with other clarifications, will ensure a uniform approach across all Member States and contribute to a more level playing field between online and traditional accommodation and transport services. It also makes life simpler for SMEs using the platforms as they will no longer need to understand and ensure compliance with VAT rules, often in other Member States.
- The introduction of a single VAT registration across the EU: Building on the already existing ‘One Stop Shop’ model for e-commerce traders, today’s proposal will further reduce the circumstances in which businesses that want to sell to consumers in more than one Member State have to register in other Member States. With this reform, traders who operate cross-border can opt to register in only one Member State for their sales to consumers across the EU and for their transfers of goods for storage in other Member States.
After registration in one Member State, they will then be able to fulfil their VAT obligations via a single online portal and interact solely with the tax administration of that Member State in one language, even though their sales are EU-wide. Smaller businesses, in particular those who want to scale-up, will benefit from the much simpler administration introduced by the new rules.
The proposal also makes it mandatory for online platforms to register for the Import One Stop Shop which will further improve VAT compliance.
Overall, the announced measures should help Member States to collect up to €18 billion more a year in VAT revenues over the next ten years. Businesses should save €5 billion a year in compliance costs overall in the same period.
DIGITAL REPORTING REQUIREMENTS
How do companies in the EU currently account for their VAT?
Currently, businesses selling across EU Member States need to submit a so-called ‘recapitulative statement’ to their national tax authority which provides a global overview of the goods and services they have sold to businesses in other EU Member States during that period and which are taxable in that Member State. That information is then shared with other Member States, which helps tax authorities to ensure that VAT is being accounted for and remitted correctly.
However, businesses are currently only obliged to complete recapitulative statements as little as four times a year in some Member States. Since VAT fraud can take place in the blink of an eye, these reporting requirements do not allow authorities to rapidly detect suspicious or fraudulent transactions. The information reaches the other Member States too late – up to four months later in the best-case scenario. Nor is the information detailed enough, seriously undermining Member States’ ability to fight criminal VAT fraud.
At the same time, some Member States have already introduced digital real-time reporting solutions for domestic transactions – with considerable success. But such individual action can in turn lead to fragmentation across the EU, translating into €4 billion a year on average burden for businesses and inefficiency in cross-border controls.
How will the new system work in practice?
Once the new rules are in place, EU companies will issue electronic invoices for cross-border business to business transactions, and report automatically to their tax administration on a subset of data from those invoices according to a European standard. They will no longer need to report monthly through ‘recapitulative statements’ as they do now, as this information will have been made available through their e-invoices.
To make the best use of the reported data, national tax administrations will share them through a new IT system which will also support joint analysis. At a stroke, the new system therefore makes sure that Member State authorities are fully informed of transactions in real time, allowing them to detect and address problems and instances of VAT fraud immediately. The removal of existing cumbersome reporting requirements and the move to e-invoicing will save EU businesses over €4.1 billion per year on average in compliance costs over the next ten years. E-invoicing also offers companies an opportunity to further automate their business and to optimise their supply chains.
Finally, the updated framework will allow all Member States to introduce mandatory e-invoicing for domestic business to business transactions, if they so wish, provided that the same European standard is made available to businesses. Currently, Member States need to seek and be granted a derogation from the current VAT Directive in order to allow this. For Member States that have already implemented a domestic e-invoicing system, the proposal foresees that reporting requirements should converge with the new pan-EU reporting standard by 2028, leading to further savings for companies.
What is Missing Trader fraud and how will the new reporting system help to address it?
VAT missing trader fraud or Missing Trader Intra-Community Fraud (MTIC) (also called carousel fraud when it repeats just like a carousel) exploits the fact that VAT is not immediately charged on business-to-business transactions of goods between EU Member States (i.e. the supplier does not have to charge VAT on his transaction and the acquirer has to account for the VAT due).
For instance, when a VAT registered trader buys goods from another Member State, he does not pay VAT to the supplier but is required to charge and account for VAT on his acquisitions in his own Member State.
On the other hand, suppliers do not have to apply VAT on their sales and have the right to reclaim the VAT they have already paid. Fraudsters can take advantage of the system by acquiring goods free of VAT and reselling them on the domestic market inclusive of VAT, and at a lower price than competitors.
Fraud takes place when that VAT is not passed on to the national authorities. The first company in the chain in the Member State of acquisition (the Missing Trader) can simply disappear, taking the collected VAT with him. This kind of fraud happens very fast. Missing Traders can disappear after a few months making the detection of fraud, and the subsequent enforcement of the missing VAT a real challenge for tax authorities that – currently – rely on monthly or quarterly information from taxpayers.
By ensuring that the Member States concerned have real-time digital reporting information on cross border transactions of goods and services, they will be in a much better position to crack down more quickly and to address this fraud.
VAT IN THE PLATFORM ECONOMY
How is the platform economy currently treated for VAT purposes?
The platform economy has boomed in recent years, with online platforms acting as an intermediary between the suppliers of certain services and consumers. Under current VAT rules, it is the underlying providers of services, e.g. the person renting out an apartment, who is obliged to collect and remit VAT to the tax authorities.
But many underlying suppliers – whether an individual person or a small business – are unaware that they may be liable for VAT on the services they offer. Even when aware, it can be difficult to acquaint themselves with the VAT system and to comply with their VAT obligations
At the same time, the economies of scale and sheer number of users of these platforms, particularly in the accommodation and passenger transport sectors, mean that these providers are now in direct competition with traditional VAT registered suppliers such as hotels and private transport companies.
What will change?
The new rules announced today clarify that intermediary platforms in the short-term accommodation and passenger transport sectors must ensure VAT collection and remittance on the sales they facilitate when the underlying supplier has not done so. This will remove the current inequality in the area of VAT suffered by traditional operators in these sectors. In addition, estimates show that this simple change should bring in up to €6.6 billion per year in additional VAT revenues for Member States over the next ten years. Similar provisions are already up and running in other parts of the world, including in Canada, and are operating smoothly.
In parallel, and by standardising the information that must be provided to authorities, the platforms themselves will collectively save €48 million per year over the same 10-year period.
SMEs who rent property in another Member State through an online platform, and who may be required to register and charge VAT in that Member State, will also benefit. Under the new rules, the platform will be able to account for this VAT on behalf of the SME.
Finally, the new proposal clarifies definitively that the short-term rental of accommodation is not exempt from VAT in the EU.
How will it work in practice?
Under the current VAT rules, a hotel in a large European city, for example, faces competition from a platform which may facilitate thousands of listings in the same city, many of which are not taxed.
Under the new rules, where the underlying supplier of passenger transport or short-term accommodation does not charge VAT, the platform will charge VAT on their behalf. The platform will collect the VAT from the customer and remit it to the tax authorities. Day-to-day operations of underlying suppliers is not affected: VAT is simply automatically added to the price shown on the platform.
As with other businesses dealing with cross-border supplies, where the supply is in a Member State in which the platform is not established, they will be able to declare the VAT via the existing simplification measures, such as the OSS and the reverse charge.
SINGLE VAT REGISTRATION IN THE EU
How has the EU’s VAT system kept pace with the digital age when it comes to VAT registration?
Huge progress has been made in recent years to make the EU’s VAT system as easy as possible to use for companies that sell to consumers across the EU, in particular online. Since July 2021, a new online system (the ‘One Stop Shop’ – or OSS – and ‘Import One Stop Shop’ – or IOSS – portals) allows businesses to declare and remit the VAT due on their cross-border sales of goods and services to consumers within the EU via one Member State administration and in one language (see separate question below).
But some traders who want to sell goods to consumers within a Member State other than their own still need to register in those other Member States for VAT purposes. The same problem affects traders who simply want to move stock to another Member State for storage. Registering for VAT can be time consuming and expensive, costing a minimum of €1,200 per Member State – particularly costly for SMEs, start-ups and businesses looking to scale-up.
How will you address the issue?
Now we need to go one step further by expanding the OSS to include additional sales, thereby giving businesses the possibility to register only once in one Member State for their supplies across the EU, including when they simply want to move stock to another Member State in order to be sold there directly to consumers at a later stage.
The expanded ‘One Stop Shop’ will allow them to take care of their VAT obligations via a single online portal and in one language.
Furthermore, by extending the deemed supplier provision, online platforms will also collect the VAT due in respect of sales via their platforms made by EU established traders, thereby further simplifying VAT obligations for these EU traders, especially SMEs. Estimates show that businesses, 93% of them SMEs, will save €800 million annually in VAT registration-related costs.
Under the proposal, companies in one Member State holding stock in another will also be able to sell goods on to another company in the second Member State, where the recipient business will account for VAT in that Member State (according to the reverse mechanism) without the supplier needing to register separately for VAT purposes. Companies in this situation currently have to register for VAT in other Member States just to sell that stock on to another business.
Example 1:
Today, a flowers and plants wholesaler based in France who has stocks of seeds and plants in Germany, Spain and Poland for sales to consumers at a later date, needs to register and comply with VAT administration rules in each of these Member States.
Under the new system, this wholesaler will have the possibility to register only once for VAT across the entire EU and will be able to take care of all his VAT administration via the online portal, in only one language. This will save him money and time that he can invest in his business.
Example 2:
If the same wholesaler wants to sell to other businesses in the Member States in which he holds his stocks, he will be able to apply the reverse charge mechanism. This will allow him to avoid registration in those Member States as the business acquiring the goods will declare and pay the VAT due.
What changes for online platforms selling into the EU?
The new proposal also makes it mandatory for platforms selling goods from third countries to consumers in the EU to register for the IOSS. This move will further ensure that VAT is being charged on all eligible goods sold into the EU, in turn securing revenues for Member States and bringing a more level playing field for EU businesses.
Separately, online platforms that facilitate the sale of goods to a final consumer in the EU will become responsible for the collection and remittance of VAT (‘deemed supplier’), whether they are located inside or outside of the EU. Furthermore, platforms will also become the deemed supplier for transfers of underlying suppliers’ goods to other Member States, prior to their sale. OSS simplification options are also available for platforms to declare and pay the VAT due on all such supplies.
What other changes are being proposed today to improve the One Stop Shop system?
The ‘One Stop Shop’ (OSS) and ‘Import One Stop Shop’ (Import OSS) allows businesses to declare and remit the VAT due on their sales on goods and services within the EU, and on imports of low-value goods into the EU.
In that vein, the system was designed to simplify VAT compliance for cross-border online shopping sales and introduce greater transparency for EU shoppers when it comes to pricing and consumer choice. It also contributes to a fairer and simpler system of taxation in the EU, and to the modernisation of VAT in line with the realities of the e-commerce market.
Figures emerging following an ex-post evaluation of the first 6 months of application of the e-commerce package point to a successful implementation of the new system with Member States collecting approximatively €8 billion in VAT revenues via the OSS and IOSS portals, which equates to approximately €16 billion on an annual basis.
Now that the OSS and IOSS systems are fully up and running, the Commission is today proposing further targeted simplifications that can offer an even better experience for e-commerce traders and customers. Those are:
- Updating the systems to reflect the entry into force of new VAT rules governing VAT rates and the VAT scheme for SMEs
- Faster and more efficient correction process
- Improved exchanges of information between tax and customs authorities.
For more information
Questions and Answers: VAT GAP 2022 report
Factsheet on VAT in the Digital Age proposals
Factsheet on the VAT Gap 2022 report
More information on the DG TAXUD website on the 2022 VAT Gap report
Source – EU Commission
Remarks by Commissioner Gentiloni at the press conference on VAT in the Digital Age and the Directive on Administrative Cooperation (DAC8)
Today we are launching two major new initiatives to help to align our tax system with the digital world, to support the fight against tax fraud and evasion and to increase fairness in certain sectors.
Why is this action needed?Firstly, because the rapid digitalisation of our economies poses challenges for our tax systems, like how to treat new business models such as the platform economy, and new digital transactions, notably in the crypto-asset market.
Secondly, because we need to reduce tax fraud and tax evasion. Today we have published new VAT Gap figures which show that Member States in 2020 lost €93 billion in VAT revenues, one quarter of which can be conservatively attributed to fraud. €93 billion, which was less than in the previous year, for more efficiency but also less activity In 2020 in relation to 2019.
Thirdly, because technological advancements can help to deliver innovative solutions to act on such activity and redirect these sums to where they belong: funding our public services and the mountain of investments we face.
And lastly, because it remains vital to continue working to make our tax systems fairer and more equitable and to make it easier for companies in the EU, in particular SMEs, to take advantage of our Single Market and to scale up their businesses.
Let me start with the VAT in the Digital Age proposal. VAT is one of the most important sources of revenue for our Member States. And our continuous efforts to improve the EU’s VAT system have started to pay off.
Last year we had a landmark deal – not a short discussion – to modernise the VAT rates framework, bringing it into line with EU priorities and giving Member States more flexibility.
Our new rules for VAT for e-commerce have also seen considerable success since their entry into force in July 2021. They have simplified cross-border online shopping for businesses and consumers alike, while making it easier for Member States to collect VAT due on online sales.
And while the overall VAT Gap is still of concern, we have seen it decrease in recent years due to efforts at EU and national level, such as better risk analysis and cooperation between countries and, of course, technology.
But inconsistencies remain.
The EPPO uncovered a vast VAT fraud network across the EU and beyond recently, which deprived national authorities and our public services of 2.2 billion euros in revenues.
The success of that investigation is great news, and I congratulate the EPPO on the results. But our aim must be to stop this criminality before it happens. That means better detection, to prevent the fraud happening in the first place.
At the same time, the VAT system has not kept pace with the platform economy and is still cumbersome to use for businesses that want to sell to consumers in multiple Member States.
For these reasons, we now need to go further, to bring the VAT system into the Digital Age.
The proposal consists of three pillars.
First, real-time digital reporting.
Criminal VAT fraud is possible because current VAT reporting is simply too slow for Member States to keep up with intra-EU trade, with information sometimes arriving months after a transaction.
Our proposal will introduce an EU-wide standard for the real-time reporting of cross-border supplies, through transaction-based electronic invoicing.
This means that each intra-EU business-to-business transaction in goods will need to be accompanied by an e-invoice, submitted to national authorities through an EU wide database.
At a stroke, it will allow Member States to tackle fraud by giving them the real-time information they need to act on suspicious transactions. And by sharing this information, national authorities will be able to cooperate more efficiently.
We estimate that the move to the new e-invoicing system will help Member States recoup up to 11 billion euros in revenues a year over the next ten years: money that is currently lost to VAT fraud.
And it will alleviate the current heavy reporting requirements, saving businesses 4.1 billion euros a year over the same period. So it is a win-win proposal.
The second pillar is about VAT rules for the platform economy.
Current VAT rules lead to many transactions for short-term accommodation and passenger transport services supplied via a platform going untaxed, which means an unfair playing field for traditional hotels and taxis.
The proposal aims to eliminate this unequal treatment by making the platform accountable for collecting the VAT due where the supplier does not do so.
It will also simplify compliance for SMEs and individual users of these intermediaries, in that they will not have to worry about their VAT obligations going forward, because it will be the platform to do so.
And the third pillar is the single VAT registration.
Many businesses still find it difficult to sell to consumers in multiple Member States because of the administration and compliance hurdles involved in registering for VAT separately in each country.
So we want to extend the already successful new online system for VAT on e-commerce, which came into force in 2021, to other businesses that want to sell to consumers across the Single Market.
Today’s proposal would allow even more companies to register only once for VAT purposes for their activities across the EU and fulfil their VAT obligations in one language, via a single online portal.
This will save businesses, especially SMEs, some 8.7 billion euros over the next ten years.
The second initiative we are presenting is about crypto-asset transparency.
The fight against tax evasion and avoidance is also what prompted today’s other initiative, the latest amendment to the Directive on Administrative Cooperation, also known as DAC8. Today, we are proposing new tax transparency rules for all service providers facilitating transactions in crypto-currencies for customers who reside in the EU.
The cover of anonymity, the fact that there are more than 9,000 different crypto-assets currently available, and the inherent digital nature of the trade means that many crypto-asset users that are making huge profits fall under the radar of national tax authorities.
So our proposal will mean that Member States get the information they need to ensure that taxes are paid for gains made in trading or investing crypto-assets, as they would be for any other financial assets.
In practice, this means that crypto-asset service providers, irrespective of their size or location, will need to report transactions of clients residing in the EU, whether these transactions are domestic or cross-border.
We are also aligning the entry into force of DAC8 with the timing agreed for the implementation of the OECD crypto-assets reporting framework. Both DAC8 and the rules of this framework will enter into force on 1 January 2026. All jurisdictions that have agreed the OECD crypto-assets reporting framework, the United States included, will follow a similar calendar.
The DAC8 proposal aims, in addition, to further close loopholes and improve administrative cooperation among EU Member States in support of fair taxation, by requiring financial institutions to also report on e-money and on central bank digital currencies.
And to ensure that rules are followed, we are setting a common minimum level of penalties for the most serious non-compliant behaviours.
In these challenging times, public finances need sound and predictable tax revenues and citizens demand tax fairness and strong action against tax fraud and tax evasion. We believe that today’s proposals are a good step forward towards these common goals.
Thank you for your attention.
Source – EU Commission