Email. This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
Email. This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
EU Advocate General's decision to cost the UK £7 BILLION in lost tax revenue
Press Release from www.brugesgroup.com
For Immediate Release
On Thursday, 6th April 2006 the Advocate General issued an opinion today, which if followed by the European Court of Justice, will poke another hole in British tax sovereignty. It will mean that dividends paid from EU companies to the UK should be exempt from tax, rather than taxed as they currently are under UK law.
The Advocate General criticised the British Government's defence, even though HM Treasury's estimates that £7 BILLION of tax is at stake, saying,
"I note that the UK government has not attempted to provide any justification for its failure to raise the temporal limitation plea in its written submissions, or for its failure to provide substantial argument on the issue during the procedure before the Court as a whole."
This is a shocking expose of the Government's lax attitude to protect British sovereignty on tax matters and a sharp contrast to Gordon Brown's proclaimed defiance.
- ENDS -
Notes for Editors
"144. In the present case, the plea of limitation of temporal effects was not raised by the UK government in its written submissions. Rather, it raised this plea at the oral hearing, without providing detailed substantive arguments or evidence on either of the two elements of which, by the consistent case law I set out above, the Court needs to be satisfied in order to limit the temporal effect of a judgment. As regards the first element - risk of serious financial repercussions owing to the large number of legal relationships entered into in good faith on the basis of rules considered to be validly in force - while the UK estimated the potential figure at stake as £ 7 billion, it gave no indication of how it arrived at this figure, or of the number of affected legal relationships upon which it was based. The UK government did not offer any more clarification on the issue in response to the Test Claimants' counter argument that the true amount at stake would be between £ 100 million and £ 2 billion."
"145. For these reasons, I am of the view that the Court should reject the UK government's plea of temporal limitation without more, on the basis of insufficient substantiation. I note that the UK government has not attempted to provide any justification for its failure to raise the temporal limitation plea in its written submissions, or for its failure to provide substantial argument on the issue during the procedure before the Court as a whole."
For further information contact:
Robert Oulds
Director
The Bruges Group
232 Linen Hall, 162-168 Regent Street, London W1B 5TB
UK
Tel: +44(0) 20 7287 4414
Mobile: 0774 002 9787
E-mail: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.