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Home International Customs Beljium

Belgium must comply EU order to claw back €700m:General Court

byCT Report
27/07/2016
in Beljium, Latest News
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BRUSSELS: Belgium must comply with an EU order to claw back €700 million in tax after its bid to suspend the order was rejected by the EU General Court.

Belgium had asked the court to suspend a European Commission decision about a programme that gave relief on “excess profits” made by Belgian companies that were part of multinational groups. The administrative burden of collecting the data needed, recalculating the tax that should have been paid and enforcing repayment with interest would harm a “relatively small country” like Belgium, it told the Court.

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However, the Court rejected this, and saying that the country’s government had failed to show how it would suffer “serious and irreparable harm”. The request to suspend the order should therefore be rejected for lack of “urgency”, it said.

The scheme, which has been running since 2005, allowed some multinational companies to reduce their corporate tax base by between 50% and 90% to allow for ‘excess profits’ that were considered to result from being part of a multinational group.

Under the tax rulings the actual recorded profit of a multinational was compared to the hypothetical profit of a standalone company in a similar position. The difference was then deemed to be ‘excess profit’ and the tax base reduced accordingly, the Commission said.

The Commission’s investigation found that this does not follow normal practice under Belgian rules nor the EU state aid ‘arm’s-length principle’, and is illegal under EU rules.

The Commission estimated at the time that the aid to be recovered would amount in total to around €700 million and that the Belgian authorities would have to deal with around 35 multinational companies.

State aid expert Caroline Ramsay of Pinsent Masons, the law firm behind Out-Law.com said: “Suspensions of claw back orders in state aid cases are notoriously difficult to get so it is no great surprise that this application failed.”

“This sends a strong signal to other companies subject to state aid tax investigations that, unless serious and irreparable harm of the aid recipient can be pointed to, it is likely that the claw back order will be enforced pending the outcome of the appeal,” she said.

Competition law expert Caroline Janssens, also of Pinsent Masons, said: “The claw back of unlawful aid comes with enormous complexities, and this is even more the case in the context of a state aid scheme. In this case, given the large number of companies involved, the process is very likely to take many years, with damaging consequence for all parties involved. A recovery order usually involves payment of the full amount of the tax advantage received, including interests at a high rate.”

“The organisations that have been awarded the unlawful state aid are likely to suffer severe financial consequences as, by repaying the aid, their cash flow or funds could be significantly reduced. When in receipt of a tax deal, especially if it looks particularly advantageous, companies need to be extremely attentive to state aid risk. The authority that granted the unlawful aid will undoubtedly suffer reputational damage, too,” she said.

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