Loading page...

Romanian Business News - ACTMedia :: Services|About us|Contact|RSS RSS

Subscribe|Login

Deloitte: Romania to count less on the low taxation advantage in order to attract investments

The fiscal competition is growing. Eight EU member states have cut their corporate tax rates in order to become more attractive from a tax perspective since 20017, a Deloitte Romania analysis based on Deloitte Global data has revealed, romaniajournal.ro reads. Even in the new context, the Romanian corporate tax rate remains among the lowest in the EU, ranking on the sixth position. However, Romania’s neighbors such as Hungary and Bulgaria have significantly lower rates, 9 percent and 10 percent respectively.

“The decisions to lower the corporate tax rates in 2017-2018 made almost simultaneously by eight member states represent a substantial change of approach. Until last year, the vast majority of EU countries have treated tax cuts cautiously. The trend is expected to continue in the upcoming years given the official statements of some EU countries, such as France, Poland or Belgium. In this context, it becomes obvious that Romania will be able to count less on the low taxation as a major stimulus to attract investors and will need to focus on other business-friendly policies such as legislative predictability and stability, red tape cutting, infrastructure development, and workforce training,” said Dan Badin, Partner-in-Charge, Deloitte Romania Tax and Legal Services.

According to Deloitte Romania’s analysis, 13 member states have cut their corporate tax rates since 2013 and 8 of these 13 countries that cut their taxes, namely Belgium, Croatia, Hungary, Italy, Luxembourg, Poland, Slovakia, the United Kingdom, operated them in 2017-2018.

3 member states have increased their corporate tax rates over the past five years: Greece in 2015, Slovenia in 2017, and Latvia in 2018. However, the member states with the lowest corporate tax rates are: Hungary (9 percent), Bulgaria (10 percent), Ireland (12.5 percent), Cyprus (12.5 percent), Lithuania (15 percent), Poland (15 percent, but only for small businesses), Romania (16 percent).

The member states with the highest corporate tax rates are: France (33.33 percent), Germany (about 30-33 percent: the total rate results from adding the national rate, the solidarity sur-tax and the municipal tax), Belgium (29 percent).

“The main reason for cutting the corporate tax rates is the international competition to attract foreign investments. In this context, the reduction of the corporate tax rate from 35 percent to 21 percent in US may be considered as a turning point that led to similar measures in the EU member states faster than expected. All these decisions mark a change of approach in the developed countries given that the main trend until 2017 was to preserve corporate tax rates as governments feared of a negative impact on their budget revenues. At the same time, at EU level, a common corporate tax base might be adopted leading to a leveling of tax incentives. Thus, in the longer term, at least in the EU, the corporate tax rate might become the only stimulus governments can use in order to be attractive from a fiscal perspective,” Dan Badin has explained.

More