Multinational companies deprive African
governments of $11 billion in taxes each year, and G7 world leaders
should set up a new global body to regulate corporate taxation, Oxfam
International said on Monday.
By shifting profits overseas to lower
tax regimes, companies legally avoid paying taxes to the African
countries where they generate revenues, depriving governments of money
they desperately need for development, the anti-poverty group said in a
report on Africa.
When leaders of the G7 major
industrialised countries meet in Germany on June 7-8 to discuss how to
support economic growth in Africa, a vital component of their talks
should be comprehensive reform of the global tax system, Oxfam said.
“It’s absurd that there are
international organisations for trade, health and football but not for
tax,” Oxfam International executive director Winnie Byanyima said.
An international body similar to the
World Trade Organisation could represent all countries’ interests and
mediate disputes among taxation regimes, Oxfam said.
Oxfam based its calculation of the tax
revenue Africa loses on a United Nations-backed study released in April
that estimated $50 billion in illicit funds flow out of the continent
each year, much of it through corporate trade mispricing to avoid taxes
or in transfers of money obtained corruptly.
This is almost double the official development aid Africa receives each year.
G7 leaders already are discussing how to
make the global taxation system fairer, but developing countries
complain they have no seat at the table in those talks, even though they
are the victims of the present system.
Collecting more taxes would make them
less dependent on aid, an issue that is gaining importance as world
leaders prepare to adopt an ambitious new set of development goals for
ending extreme poverty in September and climate goals by year end – all
of which will be costly to fund.
“We have discussions this year that
shape the development agenda for the next 15 years, and how we finance
it is crucial to making progress,” Claire Godfrey, Oxfam senior adviser
and author of the report, said in an interview.
Tax reform would go a long way towards funding new commitments to improve schooling and healthcare, she said.
For example, G7-based companies alone
avoid about $6 billion a year in taxes due to African governments, more
than three times the amount the Ebola-affected countries of Sierra
Leone, Liberia, Guinea and Guinea-Bissau need to plug their funding gaps
to deliver free primary healthcare, she said.
One quarter of South Africans go to bed
hungry each night and a further 25 percent are at risk of missing a
meal, said Malcolm Damon, director of Economic Justice Network for
southern Africa. Governments need resources to reduce poverty, he said.
“Though it is legal what transnational
corporations are doing in transferring profits, the fact is that it is
an immoral situation,” he said in a telephone interview.
The G7 summit takes place on June 7 and 8
in Bavaria, Germany, and in July world leaders and ministers meet in
Addis Ababa to consider how to finance the new development agenda.
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