Council Directive (EU) 2020/284 of 18 February 2020 est un directive de l'Union européenne identifié par CELEX 32020L0284. La source officielle indique: to solve the problem of VAT fraud in e-commerce by strengthening cooperation between tax authorities and payment service providers. Source: EUR-Lex et dossier du Parlement européen. Methodology

Council Directive (EU) 2020/284 of 18 February 2020

Cette page localisée explique en français les données citées de l'acte, tout en conservant les identifiants officiels, les noms et les sources primaires inchangés.

CELEX
32020L0284
Type
directive
Date
18 février 2020
Procédure
2018/0412(CNS)
Commission compétente
ECON
Étape
Procedure completed

Titre officiel: Council Directive (EU) 2020/284 of 18 February 2020 amending Directive 2006/112/EC as regards introducing certain requirements for payment service providers

Ce que fait l'acte

to solve the problem of VAT fraud in e-commerce by strengthening cooperation between tax authorities and payment service providers. ROLE OF THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT: the Council adopts the act after consulting the European Parliament but without being obliged to follow its opinion. BACKGROUND: this proposal is part of the package of legislation on the mandatory transmission and exchange of VAT-relevant payment information. It is part of the EU's broader agenda to tackle VAT fraud and improve VAT collection of internet sales . E-commerce VAT fraud is a common problem for all Member States. Member States alone do not have the information necessary to ensure that the e-commerce VAT rules are correctly applied and to tackle e-commerce VAT fraud. The Committee on Economic and Monetary Affairs adopted, under a special legislative procedure (consultation of Parliament), the report by Lídia PEREIRA (EPP, PT) on the proposal for a Council directive amending Directive 2006/112/EC as regards introducing certain requirements for payment service providers. As a reminder, this proposal complements the current VAT regulatory framework as recently modified by the VAT E-commerce Directive in the context of the Commission’s Digital Single Market Strategy. Furthermore, this initiative strengthens the administrative cooperation framework to better tackle e-commerce VAT fraud and restore fair competition. The committee recommends that the European Parliament approve the Commission's proposal subject to amendments. Members stressed the need for more transnational cooperation in order to better combat VAT e-commerce fraud in particular, as well as VAT fraud more generally (including carousel fraud). The report recalled that according to the Commission, the VAT gap (the difference between the expected VAT revenue and the amount actually collected) in the Union amounted to EUR 137.5 billion in 2017, representing a loss of 11.2 % of the total expected VAT revenue and EUR 267 of lost revenue per person in the Union. There are, however, big differences between Member States, with VAT gaps ranging from 0.6% up to 35.5%. Given that payments are executed only in a limited number of cases through virtual currencies exchange platforms, such platforms are not considered to be payment services providers as defined in Directive (EU) 2015/236 of the European Parliament and of the Council. The risk of VAT fraud, although currently limited, does however exist. The Commission shall therefore evaluate within three years whether virtual currencies exchange platforms should be included in the scope of this Directive. The proposed Directive requires payment service providers to retain, for each calendar quarter, sufficiently detailed records of beneficiaries and payment transactions corresponding to the payment services they provide, in order to assist Member States fight e-commerce VAT fraud. Members proposed that this obligation shall apply when a payment service provider executes more than 25 payment transactions to the same payee in the course of a calendar quarter or executes a transfer of funds with a monetary value of at least EUR 2500 in a single payment transaction.…

Sources primaires

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