- Highlights include:
- EU public CbCR reporting obligations explained
- An overview of the current and incoming mandatory and voluntary tax disclosures
- Meaningful tax data: quality and understanding v quantity
- The importance of a supporting narrative to build trust for good disclosure and stakeholder engagement
London, England July 18, KPMG Global Responsible Tax Project and Jericho Chambers published ‘Public Tax Reporting: Understanding complexity: making disclosure meaningful,’ a paper based on a series of roundtable discussions with industry leaders, including investors, rating agencies, ESG professionals and tax directors. The paper explores the complexities of tax transparency and the intricate concepts of tax reporting which have recently become more significant due to heightened public scrutiny and the demand for corporate accountability.
Following the introduction of public Country-by-Country Reporting (CbCR) in the European Union (EU) – as well as in Australia – both of which will apply to calendar year end companies from 1.1.25 many multinational corporations will now be subject to new public reporting requirements. The KPMG led discussions delved into stakeholders needs from public tax reporting, the logic behind these needs, the obstacles to providing such information and the best practices for communicating it effectively with the goal being to move from minimal disclosure to full transparency thereby fostering trust.
Different regions around the world are at different stages of the journey and there are varying types of transparency codes, some voluntary, some mandatory, some industry specific, some directly tax related and some implied through ESG reporting. After the EU Directive was incorporated into national laws, most of the EU member states have issued legislation, with most member states introducing penalties for non-compliance.
Multinationals are now confronted with a paradox: while some stakeholders demand more data before trusting what a company says about its tax position, complex tax data can create misunderstanding that can lead to debate over its meaning and questions about its accuracy, thereby actually reducing trust.
The EU public CbCR reporting obligations stem from the OECD BEPS Action Plan 13, which when properly implemented could be the pivotal first step of an organization’s tax transparency journey.The EU public CbCR reporting obligations stem from the OECD BEPS Action Plan 13, which when properly implemented could be the pivotal first step of an organization’s tax transparency journey.
For media queries, please contact:
Daniel Caines,
Senior Manager, Global External Communications, KPMG International
T: +44 7732400262
E: Daniel.Caines@kpmg.co.uk
About KPMG International
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Grant Wardell-Johnson
Global Tax Policy Leader and Chair of the Global Tax Policy Leadership Group
KPMG International