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Tax deals might not be ethical, says Jean-Claude Juncker

 

Jan Strupczewski,Matthias Sobolewski
Thursday 13 November 2014 09:58 GMT
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European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker gestures during a press conference in Brussels on Wednesday
European Commission chief Jean-Claude Juncker gestures during a press conference in Brussels on Wednesday (Getty Images)

The new European Commission president took political responsibility on Wednesday for Luxembourg’s role in helping global companies avoid tax, and Germany urged swift action to fight tax evasion in Europe.

Jean-Claude Juncker, who served as finance minister and prime minister of Luxembourg for more than two decades, reacted for the first time since investigative journalists reported last week that the tiny state had granted deals to some 340 companies, allowing them to avoid tax.

At a time of near record unemployment in the European Union, the affair has overshadowed the start of the new Commission, billed by Mr Juncker as “Europe’s last chance” to show citizens the bloc can act in their interests.

The revelations put Mr Juncker under intense pressure to make clear his position on the tax deals, and raised questions about whether they create a conflict of interest for him.

“I am politically responsible for what happened in each and every corner and quarter [of Luxembourg],” he said, adding that while in line with Luxembourg and European laws, the tax practices may not have been ethical.

Mr Juncker, 59, said Luxembourg’s tax authorities were independent of the government and denied being the brain behind the policies. Global brands such as PepsiCo, Amazon, insurer AIG and Deutsche Bank are reported to have benefited from deals with Luxembourg. Ireland and the Netherlands are also under investigation.

“I am not the architect of what you could call the Luxembourgish problem,” Mr Juncker told reporters in a surprise appearance at a daily Commission briefing.

“There is nothing in my past indicating that my ambition was to organise tax evasion in Europe,” he added.

The Commission is investigating several tax schemes offered by Luxembourg to large multinational corporations, to see if they broke EU laws on state aid.

To prevent such situations in the future, Mr Juncker said the EU needed a law on a corporate tax base across the 28-nation bloc, something countries have long opposed.

Reuters

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