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Tax in a Borderless World: The Role of the OECD IRS/George Washington University 20th Annual International Tax Conference Washington December 13 & 14,

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Presentation on theme: "Tax in a Borderless World: The Role of the OECD IRS/George Washington University 20th Annual International Tax Conference Washington December 13 & 14,"— Presentation transcript:

1 Tax in a Borderless World: The Role of the OECD IRS/George Washington University 20th Annual International Tax Conference Washington December 13 & 14, 2007 By Jeffrey Owens, Director Centre for Tax Policy and Administration OECD www.oecd.org/ctp

2 December 13-14, 2007 2 Membership: 3 NAFTA, 4 Asian-Pacific countries and 23 European countries Setter of “soft” and occasionally “hard” rules A forum for discussing the economic and social challenges of interdependence and globalisation A provider of comparative data, analysis and forecasts to underpin multilateral co-operation The OECD

3 December 13-14, 2007 3 What are we? A forum for senior policy makers and administrators What do we cover? All international and related domestic tax issues Biannual meeting Eight subsidiary bodies Centre for Tax Policy and Administration How are we organised? The Committee on Fiscal Affairs

4 December 13-14, 2007 The Committee on Fiscal Affairs Subsidiary Body*Area of responsibility Working Party N°1Tax Conventions and Related Questions Working Party N°2Tax Policy Analysis and Tax Statistics Working Party N°6Taxation of Multinational Enterprises Working Party N°8Tax Avoidance and Evasion Working Party N°9Consumption Taxes Forum on Harmful Tax PracticesAddresses anti-competitive tax practices and is working with tax havens to improve transparency and to establish effective exchange of information Forum on Tax AdministrationFocuses on taxpayer service and compliance Board for Co-operation with Non-OECD Economies Has the responsibility of supervising the alignment between the co-operation programmes with NOEs and the core interests and expertise of the CFA 4 * Working Parties N° 3, 4, 5, 7 were abolished

5 December 13-14, 2007 5 What are we? Forty plus professionals grouped into 5 divisions: Treaties/Transfer Pricing; International Co-operation; Tax Policy; Tax Administration; Outreach First Draft of reports for the CFA Advise other parts of OECD on tax related issues (e.g R & D) Assist governments in their tax reforms Co-ordinate with other international organisations What do we do? The Centre for Tax Policy & Administration

6 December 13-14, 2007 Major outputs of the CFA Model Tax Convention Transfer Pricing Guidelines Standards on Exchange of Information Best Practices Guidelines in Tax Administration International VAT/GST Guidelines Comparative Analysis and Statistics on Tax Levels and Structures Anti-Bribery Convention 6

7 December 13-14, 2007 How governments participate in the OECD’s work Country ambassadors form Council of Ministers who set overall policy Senior tax policy-makers and administrators are delegates to CFA Technical experts (e.g. from Treasury and IRS) are delegates to subsidiary bodies Joint secretariat / government experts seminars with non-Member countries 7

8 December 13-14, 2007 8 How do issues get onto the OECD’s tax agenda? Politicians (Secretary-General meets Ministers, annual ministerial, sector ministerials) e.g. tax and growth CFA delegates e.g. attribution of income to permanent establishment, business restructuring Business (BIAC, associations, individual companies) e.g. arbitration, CIV/REITS

9 December 13-14, 2007 Business participation in OECD’s tax work Business and Industry Advisory Committee to the OECD (BIAC)  United States Council for International Business (USCIB) TAGs, BAGs, etc. Discussion drafts Public consultations 9

10 December 13-14, 2007 10 Limited Membership, Global Reach Why involve NOEs ? Global guidelines need global acceptance To assist in the development of their tax systems How ? Observers Developing partnerships Multilateral, regional and in-country programmes Over 600 events with NOEs including around 14,000 officials Outcomes Twenty-five NOEs set out position on Model. Many NOEs basing transfer pricing legislation on 1995 Guidelines A more coherent global tax environment for MNEs

11 December 13-14, 2007 11 Current 30 Member countries account for  60% plus of world’s GDP  70% plus of inward and outward investment Enlarging the OECD

12 December 13-14, 2007 12 The Next Wave The five applicants: Estonia, Slovenia, Israel, Chile and Russia  A 2-5 year process And at the same time enhancing our involvement with the BIICS (Brazil, India, Indonesia, China, South Africa) with a view to possible accession Continued deepening of partnerships with many other NOEs

13 December 13-14, 2007 13 Candidate countries should commit to the following core tax principles Eliminating international double taxation through complying with the key substantive conditions underlying the OECD Model Tax Convention; Eliminating double taxation through ensuring the primacy of the arm’s length principle, as set forth in the OECD’s Transfer Pricing Guidelines;

14 December 13-14, 2007 14 Candidate countries should commit to the following core tax principles (2)  Engaging in effective exchange of information;  Combating harmful tax practices;  Eliminating double taxation through the development and implementation of International VAT/GST Guidelines. Overall accession process provides opportunity to achieve greater convergence with OECD core principles

15 December 13-14, 2007 15 The OECD in 2020 All major economies Represented on all continents Accounting for 80 % of world’s GDP/Foreign Direct Investment

16 December 13-14, 2007 16 How can we respond to these pressures? (i)Providing rules on what’s acceptable / unacceptable tax practices to attract activities (ii)Achieving a deeper understanding by governments of new business models and by business of the concerns of governments (iii)Intensifying co-operation between governments to improve international tax compliance and enhancing the relationship between taxpayers and revenue bodies

17 December 13-14, 2007 17 (iv)Achieving greater consistency in implementation of guidelines, models, etc. (v)Identifying best practices in tax administration (vi)Developing an OECD set of guidelines on VAT (vii)Providing more comparative analytical material to inform the political debate on tax reform How can we respond to these pressures (2)?


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