Commissie presenteert actieplan ter bestrijding van BTW-fraude (en)

Met dank overgenomen van Europese Commissie (EC) i, gepubliceerd op maandag 1 december 2008.

Today the European Commission adopted a Communication presenting a short term action plan with a list of future legislative measures to enhance the capacity of tax administrations to prevent or detect VAT fraud (in particular "missing trader fraud") and to recover taxes Moreover, it has adopted two measures to amend the VAT Directive. The first aims to prevent the existing abuse by fraudsters of the VAT exemption at importation and the second to give Member States the possibility to make the supplier of goods liable for the VAT loss created by his missing customer in another Member State, when he did not report his supply to his VAT authority.

László Kovács i, Commissioner for Taxation and Customs, said: "My aim is to tackle VAT fraud effectively, without creating unnecessary administrative burden for legitimate trade. Each individual measure should bring added value, but it is only the implementation as a whole which will provide to the tax authorities with an adequate framework for combating VAT fraud. The success of the strategy will finally depend on what will be adopted by the Council. I therefore call upon the Member States to take up their responsibility and adopt the measures as soon as possible.".

Missing trader fraud is where a taxable person, having made an intra-Community acquisition on which VAT has not been charged, makes a subsequent domestic supply on which he charges VAT and then disappears without having paid that VAT to the Treasury.

Set of measures to be proposed by the Commission in the future

The Communication provides a global approach to enhance the tools for Tax Administrations to tackle VAT fraud at different stages in the process. The action plan proposes to introduce measures to:

  • prevent potential fraudsters from abusing the VAT system including: common approach to the registration and de-registration process of VAT taxable persons in the EU; on line confirmation available to traders of the validity of the VAT identification number of their customer; simplification, modernisation and harmonisation of the current rules on invoicing
  • enhance the tools for the detection of VAT fraud, in particular by the creation of a European network, called Eurofisc, for closer operational cooperation between Member States;
  • strengthen the possibilities for tax authorities to recover VAT losses in cross-border cases (including, improvement of the mutual assistance between tax authorities for the recovery of taxes, introduction of shared responsibility for the protection of all VAT revenue independently of the Member State to which it is due).

The two measures adopted today

The Commission has also adopted a proposal to amend the VAT Directive in two specific areas:

  • The importation of goods is exempt from VAT if followed by a supply or transfer of those goods to a trader in another Member State. Inadequate implementation of this exemption in national law has lead to difficulty in following-up the physical movement of the imported goods. Experience shows the increasing use of this particular exemption in missing trader fraud schemes. Therefore, the Commission proposes to tighten the conditions under which the importer can benefit from the exemption: at the time of importation, he shall clearly indicate to the Member State of import his VAT identification number, the VAT identification number of his customer and he shall prove that the imported goods will be transported to another Member State.
  • Fraud investigators have reported that traders in intra-community supplies intentionally do not report (or report incomplete/false data or report late) their supply to the tax authorities. As a consequence, the Member State of destination gets no information about the arrival of goods on its territory, which impedes the detection of potential VAT losses. The Commission therefore proposes that the supplier in intra-community transactions be liable for the VAT loss created by his missing customer in another Member State, when the supplier contributed to the loss by not reporting (or by reporting false or incomplete information or by reporting late) his supply to his VAT authority. The proposal will provide tax administrations with a tool for recovering VAT from non-established traders. In order to respect the principle of proportionality, the measure introduces the liability of the supplier only if the acquirer has not submitted his VAT return related to the acquisition to his tax authority. Furthermore, it is foreseen that the supplier can refute the presumption of liability by duly justifying his shortcoming to the competent tax authority.

Background

In May 2006 the Commission presented a Communication with a view to launching a debate on the need for a co-ordinated approach in the fight against fiscal fraud inside the internal market. For two years intense and fruitful discussions followed within the different European institutions, and amongst Member States, business representatives and VAT experts, on how to handle this problem better.

The Commission has decided to concentrate its efforts on strengthening the administrative capacity of the national tax administrations in the fight against VAT fraud.

As a first step, the Commission adopted in March 2008 a legislative proposal in view of ensuring that tax administrations obtain much quickly than today (2 months instead of up to 6 months) information about intra-community transactions (IP/08/454). The Council is expected to adopt this proposal before the end of this year.

Further information on the Communication and the proposal can be found at:

http://ec.europa.eu/taxation_customs/index_en.htm

http://ec.europa.eu/taxation_customs/taxation/vat/control_anti-fraud/reports/index_en.htm


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