Common Consolidated Corporate Tax Base

The Common Consolidated Corporate Tax Base (CCCTB) is a proposal for a common tax scheme for the European Union developed by the European Commission and first proposed in March 2011 that provides a single set of rules for how EU corporations calculate EU taxes, and provide the ability to consolidate EU taxes.[1] Corporate tax rates in the EU would not be changed by the CCCTB, as EU countries would continue to have their own corporate tax rates.[1]

The original proposal stalled, largely due to objections from countries such as Ireland and the UK.[2] In June 2015, the commission announced they will submit a relaunched CCCTB proposal in 2016, featuring two key changes compared to the initial proposal: First it would become mandatory (not voluntary) for corporations to apply the CCCTB regime, and second the "consolidation part" will be postponed for a later follow-up proposal.[3]

In May 2021, the Commission expressed its intention to withdraw the CCCTB proposal, replacing it with a new framework for income taxation for businesses in Europe (Business in Europe: Framework for Income Taxation or BEFIT).[4] However, the Commission work programme for 2022 published in November 2021 did not include the CCCTB as one of the withdrawn proposals.[5]

  1. ^ a b EU common consolidated corporate tax base - citizens' summary (PDF), European Commission
  2. ^ Mahony, Honor (17 June 2015). "EU in new push for common corporate tax base". EUobserver.
  3. ^ "European Commission - Fact Sheet: Questions and Answers on the CCCTB re-launch". European Commission. 17 June 2015.
  4. ^ European Commission. "Communication on business taxation in the 21st century, 18 May 2021" (PDF).
  5. ^ European Commission. "European Commission Work Programme 2022, November 2021".

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia · View on Wikipedia

Developed by Nelliwinne