By Alina Clasen | Euractiv.com Est. 4min 14-12-2023 (updated: 15-12-2023 ) Content-Type: News News Based on facts, either observed and verified directly by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. “The Commission takes note of today's judgment of the Court of Justice of the European Union confirming the 2021 judgment of the General Court which annulled the Commission’s 2017 decision,” a Commission Spokesperson told Euractiv. [Sergei Elagin / Shutterstock] Euractiv is part of the Trust Project >>> Languages: Français | DeutschPrint Email Facebook X LinkedIn WhatsApp Telegram The EU’s top court rejected on Thursday (14 December) a decision of the European Commission that, in 2017, ordered Amazon to pay back €250 million in unpaid taxes to Luxembourg. The Court of Justice in Luxembourg ruled on Thursday against the appeal of the EU Commission. The Commission challenged a 2021 decision of the General Court of the European Union, which annulled the Commission’s illegal state aid charges against Amazon. “The Commission takes note of today’s judgment of the Court of Justice of the European Union confirming the 2021 judgment of the General Court which annulled the Commission’s 2017 decision,” a Commission Spokesperson told Euractiv. In a statement from October 2017, the EU Commission concluded that Luxembourg granted undue tax benefits to the online sales giant by allowing it to shift profits to a tax-exempt company, Amazon Europe Holding Technologies. “The Commission will carefully study the judgment and assess its implications,” the spokesperson added. Amazon wins court fight against €250 million EU tax order Amazon won on Wednesday (12 May) its fight against an EU order to pay about €250 million euros in back taxes to Luxembourg, as Europe’s second-highest court dealt a blow to the bloc’s efforts to make multinational corporations pay more taxes. A six-year fight Back in 2003, the Grand Duchy accepted Amazon’s proposal on the tax treatment of two of its Luxembourg-based subsidiaries, allowing Amazon to shift profits from Amazon EU, which is subject to tax, to a tax-exempt company, Amazon Europe Holding Technologies. After a three-year investigation launched in October 2014, the European Commission concluded in 2017 that the online sales giant received illegal tax benefits from Luxembourg. The Commission argued that, in the tax assessment, the payment of a licence fee by Amazon EU to Amazon Europe Holding Technologies was approved, resulting in a significant reduction in Amazon EU’s taxable profit. Amazon contested the decision to pay back €250 million in unpaid taxes to Luxembourg. The online sales giant and Luxembourg challenged the Commission’s decision before the EU’s lower court, the General Court. The General Court ruled in 2021 that “Luxembourg had not granted a selective advantage in favour of that subsidiary”, annulling the EU Commission’s decision. The Commission then submitted its appeal against the ruling of the EU’s lower court, which was now rejected by the Court of Justice, the EU’s top court. The verdict is another blow at the approach of Margrethe Vestager, who for a decade held the post of EU competition chief, also losing a landmark case contesting Apple’s tax regime in Ireland. Commission orders Amazon to pay €250 million in back taxes The European Commission ordered Luxembourg on Wednesday (4 October) to recover unpaid taxes worth around €250 million from the online sales giant Amazon, saying the country had granted Amazon’s European arm “undue tax benefit” by allowing it to shift profits to a tax-exempt shell company. Implications According to Matthias Kullas, Centre for European Policy expert on digital economy and fiscal policy, the ruling makes it more difficult for the Commission to take action against the aggressive tax planning of large digital companies. “Aggressive tax planning means that taxes are no longer paid where economic value is generated. Instead, companies are established where taxes are low,” Kullas told Euractiv. Companies with aggressive tax planning reduce their participation in financing public goods in the market. Yet, proportionate participation would only be fair, as these companies likewise benefit from public goods, including education and the administration of justice, Kullas explained. “Against this backdrop, the minimum taxation that will apply in the EU from 2024 is a step in the right direction but does not solve the problem,” Kullas added. For Chiara Putaturo, Oxfam EU tax expert, the EU tax rules do not work for the people but benefit the “super-rich and profit-hungry multinationals”. While EU countries can design their fiscal policies, they must also respect EU law, including state aid rules. With the proposal of the EU Commission in September to introduce new simplified tax rules, it “missed a golden opportunity“, Putaturo stated. “Profit-driven multinationals cannot continue to sidestep their tax bills by having a mailbox in countries like Luxembourg or Cyprus,” she added. In November, the EU, US, and UK voted against the UN tax convention to fight tax evasion and illicit financial flows, arguing that the Convention would be a duplication of the OECD’s work on tax transparency. EU leads pushback as Africa formally launches plan for UN tax convention EU finance ministers are leading the pushback against the campaign for a UN tax convention to make rules to tackle corporate tax evasion and illicit financial flows. [Edited by Luca Bertuzzi/Nathalie Weatherald] Read more with Euractiv EU Commission seeks third way between ‘pay or consent’ in voluntary pledges