(New York) Responding to widespread anger about corporate tax avoidance, the impacts of such avoidance on inequality and poverty, and concerns that current tax reform processes are inadequate, a new nonpartisan body the Independent Commission for the Reform of International Corporate Taxation (ICRICT)has been established to propose reforms from the perspective of the public interest.
The inaugural meeting of the Commission will take place in New York on March 18-19, 2015. The Commissions Chair, former UN Under-Secretary-General José Antonio Ocampo, says: "The world has changed but the international tax system has not. Corporations play governments against each other, for example, in encouraging race-to-the-bottom tax incentives, and the public loses out. There are billions of dollars at stake. This Commission will shed light on where the rules of the game, and the institutions that govern them, need to change."
The Commission includes prominent economic experts and political leaders from around the world: Eva Joly, Rev. Suzanne Matale, Manuel Montes, Léonce Ndikumana, Ifueko Omoigui Okauru, Govinda Rao, Magdalena Sepúlveda, and Joseph Stiglitz, Nobel Prize-winning economist. On March 18, the Commission will hear from business, academic, labor, governmental and civil society experts on potential reforms. Mr Ocampo notes that, "Tax policy affects everybody but for too long the debates have been presented as technical and reserved only for tax lawyers and accountants. There is a desperate need to bridge the gap between the technical challenges and everyones right to participate and provide solutions."
The Commission will produce a set of recommendations in the context of the on-going UN Financing for Development agenda and the G20/OECD Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) initiative.
The current international tax system reinforces global inequality and hampers poverty reductionand without changes, will continue to worsen economic and social inequality, including through forcing cuts to vital public services and hindering fulfillment of the post-2015 development agenda. Issues such as fairer allocation of tax rights between source and residence countries, public country-by-country reporting, and requirements for corporations to reveal the location of financial assets will be examined.
Written interventions from the public ahead of the March hearing are invited. The hearing is open to the public and media. Submissions to the Commission may be emailed before March 18, 2015 to info@icrict.org. Press are invited to register for the March 18 noon press briefing at the Roger Smith Hotel, 501 Lexington Ave, 16th Floor, New York by sending an email to info@icrict.org.