Time running out on EU VAT rules

Bookmark and Share

By Chris Jones
- 8th November 2005

European finance ministers failed to reach an agreement on extending reduced VAT rates at their monthly meeting on Tuesday.

Exemptions from standard VAT rules are permitted in a handful of service sectors, allowing countries to charge a lower taxation rate, but these expire on December 31 2005.

Gordon Brown, the UK Chancellor of the Exchequer who chaired the ECOFIN meeting, confirmed that there was as yet no agreement on extending the current scheme.

“But I hope to report on some progress in this area after our next meeting,” he said.

The last ECOFIN meeting of 2005 will be held on December 6, just three weeks before the current reduced rate scheme ends.

Member states have been allowed to apply a reduced VAT rate in labour intensive services (including home, clothing and bicycle repairs, hairdressing and window cleaning) since January 2000.

Originally run as a three-year trial, the scheme was extended for a year in 2003 and was prolonged for a further two years until the end of 2005.

But some countries – especially those with traditionally low VAT rates such as Germany – oppose the scheme, arguing that it undermines the entire taxation system.

Business groups had hoped that ministers would agree on Tuesday to extend the scheme until 2015, as this would provide greater business certainty.

“Everybody knows the need and the urgency of finding an agreement,” the European Builders Confederation (EBC) said in a statement.

“Ending these [reduced] rates would have a negative impact on employment, which is the last thing the EU needs.”

The EBC said that construction sector prices would rise by up to 15 per cent if VAT was charged at the full rate, pushing thousands of workers into the black market.

“The only real winner would be the shadow economy,” the confederation urged, warning of 250,000 job losses in the construction sector alone.

“SMEs in construction find it difficult to understand why some countries oppose a system authorising member states to apply reduced VAT rates for locally provided services on a voluntary basis,” the EBC said.

“The reluctant countries would neither be obliged to apply the system nor would they be threatened by unfair competition.”

Bookmark and Share

Have your say...

Please enter your comments below.

Name

Your e-mail address


Listen to audio version

Please type in the letters or numbers shown above (case sensitive)

Related News

Eurogroup rules out cut in VAT rates

Alcohol duties and VAT tax EU finance ministers

EU finance chiefs discuss alcohol taxes

EU split over VAT overhaul

Ministers hope for deal on EU VAT payments



Latest news

MEPs brand EU fisheries policy as 'catastrophic'

MEPs have described a new report by European auditors on the EU's management of fish stocks as "damning"


Hungary's media laws branded 'deeply troubling'

EU commissioner Neelie Kroes has launched a withering verbal attack on Hungary's media laws, branding them as "deeply troubling"


EU 'must protect consumers' from excessive roaming charges

The EU has been urged to do more to ensure fair pricing for mobile phone users when travelling abroad


Leading commission official allays fears of '1930s-style slump'


McMillan-Scott lambasts China for its 'abhorrent' record


Veteran UK deputy appointed rapporteur on controversial ACTA dossier


Homeless people 'excluded' from European rights


EU urged to 'keep up the pressure' on Iran


More from Dods