European Union countries will have to share information on tax deals agreed with major corporations under European Commission plans to limit the ability of big business to avoid tax across the 28-nation bloc.

EU members would, from next year, have three months to tell neighbours about new cross-border tax rulings and also have to divulge information on existing deals, European Economics Commissioner Pierre Moscovici said.

These rulings provide guarantees on how a company will be taxed but can be exploited by artificially shifting profits to the country where the rates are lowest.

The Tax Transparency Package (TTP) comes after international criticism of the tax practices of Luxembourg, based on the LuxLeaks disclosures, showing corporations secured beneficial rulings to minimise their tax due on operations in Europe.

“The Commission feels it’s time to establish fiscal equity, so that companies pay what they owe, their fair share to the right place,” Moscovici said.

“There will be no escape clause and no room for interpretation on these requirements. It will be simple. It’s automatic.”

The European Commission is also investigating whether the tax arrangements in Luxembourg for US retailer Amazon and a unit of Italian car-maker Fiat amounted to unfair state aid, as well as looking into the treatment of Starbucks by the Netherlands and Apple by Ireland.

Critics such as anti-poverty charity Oxfam said the latest proposals did nothing to prevent tax dodging but Moscovici denied they lacked teeth.

“Good behaviour will hopefully chase out bad behaviour. Tax avoidance is bad publicity for companies,” he said. Moscovici said the EU wanted global exchange of tax ruling information and the issue would be raised at an IMF meeting in April.

As part of TTP, the Commission will also consider whether to secure public access to a limited set of tax information on multinational companies, something already required for banks and oil, gas, mining and logging businesses.

Anti-corruption campaign group Transparency International said multinationals should be required to reveal earnings and taxes on a country-by-country basis to hold them to account.

Corporate tax avoidance is thought to deprive EU member states’ public budgets of billions of euros a year.

“Everyone has to pay their fair share of tax. This applies to multinationals as to everyone else.

“With this proposal on the automatic exchange of information, tax authorities would be able to better identify loopholes or duplication of tax between member states,” said vice-president Valdis Dombrovskis, responsible for the Euro and Social Dialogue.

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