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Alternative dispute resolution methods – tax mediation with the existing instruments

Alternative dispute resolution methods – tax mediation with the existing instruments. Prof. Dr Pasquale Pistone Vienna, 13 October 2015 Email: pasquale.pistone@wu.ac.at. Key issues. Expected increase of international tax disputes Effective protection of taxpayers’ rights

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Alternative dispute resolution methods – tax mediation with the existing instruments

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  1. Alternative dispute resolution methods – tax mediation with the existing instruments Prof. Dr Pasquale Pistone Vienna, 13 October 2015 Email: pasquale.pistone@wu.ac.at

  2. Key issues • Expectedincrease of internationaltaxdisputes • Effective protection of taxpayers’ rights • Prevention and non-judicial settlement of disputes through enhanced use of existing tools • Arbitration as final point for disputes that cannot be settled otherwise • Mediation can enhance functioning of arbitration

  3. Expectedincrease of disputes • The BEPS projectsteersinternationaltax law towards a coordinatedexercise of taxingjurisdictions • Itintroducesstructuralelementsthatmayrequirecoordinatedinterpretation, in order to prevent and settle cross-bordertaxdisputes, butmayalso reduce legalcertainty • Expected increase of international tax disputes • Two judgments by two separate national tax Courts are not necessarily solving problems • Unrealistic to think that all such disputes can be arbitrated

  4. Effective protection of taxpayers • Traditional view: disputes concerning the interpretation and application of tax treaties between two States affect taxpayers, but do not require their involvement • An alternative view: taxpayers are holders of rights and not just objects of tax agreements • If global problems require global answers by tax authorities, the protection of rights cannot remain confined at the level of an uncoordinated exercise of national remedies • Plea for timely and effective global tax remedies

  5. Preventing disputes with existing instruments • Think ahead and prevent some problems => dialogue with taxpayers • Use existing legal instruments and adapt them to current scenario of international tax coordination • Cooperative compliance, advance rulings and advance pricing agreements, tax mediation • A new dimension for MAPs with a more direct involvement of taxpayers => more transparency in use of discretionary powers • Wording of Art. 25 OECD MC allows for involvement of a mediator and participation of the taxpayer to MAPs • EU VAT CBR pilot programme (rulings)

  6. Mediation and arbitration • Mediation should be incorporated in a process that only leads to arbitration when disputes cannot be solved => arbitration as possible final point of a bilateral mediation process Some dilemmas: • Unilateral vs bilateral mediation • A global scheme for mediatinginternationaltaxcases: an issue for the multilateralinstrument to consider? • Should mediators be independent? • Should ombudsman and national courts be at all involved? • Does the effective participation of taxpayers harm the speed of the procedure? If so, how can we still timely preserve taxpayers’ rights?

  7. How can mediation enhance arbitration? • By reducing the number of cases that should go all the way to arbitration • By providing technical arguments concerning facts and difference in the position or parties • When it cannot mediate the different positions, it can at least potentially aggregate motivations and help in building two blocks, which can streamline the work of arbitrators, reduce cost and even lead to baseball arbitration

  8. Conclusive remarks • Global require global solutions, not just as to how States effectively collect taxes in cross-border situations, but also as to how rights of taxpayers are effectively protected • In the absence of an international tax court, arbitration offers an interesting mechanism for solving cross-border disputes • Arbitrating all international tax disputes is unrealistic after BEPS • Arbitration may be expensive and should be used when parties unanimously require it, or when a solution cannot be found otherwise in reasonable time through mediation • Developing an international tax mediation process incorporated in a path that may (but must not) end in arbitration

  9. Thank you pasquale.pistone@wu.ac.at

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