Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Foreword to the First Edition by Malcolm Gammie QC
- Foreword to the First Edition by Michael Lang
- Foreword to the Second Edition by Philip Baker
- Preface to the First Edition
- Preface to the Second Edition
- 1 A Historical Trajectory of EU Corporate Tax Law
- 2 EU Corporate Tax Legislation
- 3 The Court of Justice and the Development of EU Corporate Tax Law
- 4 Tax Obstacles to the Cross-Border Movement of Companies: Direct Investment
- 5 Tax Obstacles to Cross-Border Portfolio Investment
- 6 Reorganisations under EU Tax Law
- 7 Tax Avoidance and EU Law
- 8 State Aid and Taxation
- 9 EU Corporate Tax Law: More Interim Conclusions and Thoughts
5 - Tax Obstacles to Cross-Border Portfolio Investment
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2021
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Foreword to the First Edition by Malcolm Gammie QC
- Foreword to the First Edition by Michael Lang
- Foreword to the Second Edition by Philip Baker
- Preface to the First Edition
- Preface to the Second Edition
- 1 A Historical Trajectory of EU Corporate Tax Law
- 2 EU Corporate Tax Legislation
- 3 The Court of Justice and the Development of EU Corporate Tax Law
- 4 Tax Obstacles to the Cross-Border Movement of Companies: Direct Investment
- 5 Tax Obstacles to Cross-Border Portfolio Investment
- 6 Reorganisations under EU Tax Law
- 7 Tax Avoidance and EU Law
- 8 State Aid and Taxation
- 9 EU Corporate Tax Law: More Interim Conclusions and Thoughts
Summary
In Chapter 5, the treatment of portfolio investment was examined. For inbound dividends, the general principle is that shareholders (corporate or non-corporate) receiving foreign-sourced dividends should be treated the same way as shareholders receiving domestic dividends if they are in an objectively comparable situation, unless different treatment is justified. If the country of residence of the shareholder (the home State) chooses to provide reliefs for domestic dividends, then it must provide the same reliefs at least for EU-sourced dividends. The fact that economic double taxation is suffered because another State has imposed corporation tax on the underlying profits generating the dividends is not a relevant consideration. It has been found that a home State is not obliged to give to shareholders a credit for foreign withholding taxes, irrespective of whether it gives such credit for domestic withholding taxes. Recent cases were reviewed, some of which explored the equivalence of the credit and exemption methods in this context. Case law on the taxation of outbound dividends was very similar but with some subtle differences. This chapter also examined the payment of interest.
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- European Union Corporate Tax Law , pp. 193 - 248Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021