By Jeroen van der Wal, Founder and CEO, Taxology
As a general rule, all cross-border portfolio investment triggers “withholding
taxes” in the source country. The source country is where the funds are invested
and is the source the return on investment. The justification for applying
withholding taxes lies in the fact, without it, the foreign investor would benefit
from the infrastructure and productivity of the source country without contributing
to it.
The most common withholding taxes are those on dividends (from equity
investments) and interest (from debt investments). They are called withholding
taxes because although the foreign investor is the taxpayer, it is withheld from
the dividends or interest paid by the company in which the foreign investor has
invested and remitted to the source country’s tax administration. Source country
domestic rates vary from 10% up to 35% over the gross return of investment.
Relief from withholding tax, either at source (applied by the company paying the
dividends or interest) or by retrospective reclaims (by – or on behalf of – the
investor), is often available based on domestic law, tax treaties, the EU treaty, or
less well known legal bases. The type of relief, and the degree of relief – from a
reduction of the rate to a full exemption or refund – depends on the type of
investor, and the way in which investments are structured.
However, monetizing this tax relief means following strict and complex procedures
in the source country. And this is where the problem comes in. Within the EU, no
two withholding tax relief procedures are the same. Each country has its own
procedure, relief forms, statute of limitations, and its own take on what supporting
documentation should be submitted. Knowing your way around and complying
with all of these different procedures faces investors with tremendous compliance
costs. And in a worst case scenario faces them with double taxation[1] (or single
taxation where there should have been no taxation, like in the case of tax exempt
entities such as pension funds and charities), as the income is also taxed in the
investor’s country of residence.
This issue has been recognized since the beginning of this century by leading
institutions on international taxation like the OECD[2] and the European
Commission[3] (“EC”). In 2016, the EC’s Joint Research Centre calculated the
annual cost of this issue to amount to EUR 8.4 billion in foregone tax relief, costs
or reclaim procedures and opportunity costs. Numerous vast research reports,
recommendations, and even implementation packages spelling out what
standardized and unified relief procedures should look like, have brought no
unification, or even harmonization, in this field to the EU whatsoever. Looking at
the latest communication from the EC, “Completing the capital markets union by
2019”, released on March 8, 2018, what stands out is that the withholding tax
barrier is not mentioned once. Instead, as far as taxes are concerned, the EC
focuses solely on the common consolidated corporate tax base, its new crown
jewel. This begs the question whether they have finally given up on withholding
tax.
As founder and CEO of TAXOLOGY, a Dutch fintech start-up, I believe that waiting for standardization and unification of withholding tax relief procedures is “idle hope”. A decade and a half have past and I have seen no improvement. The only improvement is that a few tax administrations have started automating the relief procedure (filing and processing of claims’), but again without standardization or unification: each member state follows its own path.
Perhaps it is because there is too little impetus for improvement. Think about it:
source countries have no blame as long as they are adhering to all the rules for
relief, but they are in their own right to determine the procedure. Why would they
simplify, standardize or unify that procedure when that only loses them money,
twice? Once for the cost of overhauling the procedure, and again because more
investors would claim the relief they are entitled to. One could argue that what
they have to gain is easier access to capital from foreign investors. But,
apparently, that is just too much of an ancillary or indirect benefit to member
states.
At TAXOLOGY, we decided to wait no more: if member states will not make the move
that is required from them, we will make our own move. In 2016, we started
developing PROTOCOL, a web-based software platform that automates the
identification of relief entitlement, as well as the preparation and filing of claims,
following the applicable procedure in each source country.
Our current focus is on pension funds and pension asset managers, as they hold
the lion share of cross border portfolio investment. However, we apply a very
modular development of the platform, which makes it relatively easy to expand
its scope of application to other institutional investors like banks and insurance
companies. PROTOCOL went live in 2018. In its first few months of operation,
PROTOCOL recovered over EUR 3 million in withholding taxes for its users.
Jeroen van der Wal is Founder and CEO of the fintech Taxology, which developed the Protocol platform that automates the identification of tax relief entitlement and more.