In Switzerland, marriage can increase the amount of tax a couple pays, something referred to as the marriage penalty. Higher tax is levied on married couples because they are assessed on their combined income rather than separately. Another argument against the current system is that it presents an economic barrier for second income earners who […]
Swiss VAT might rise to fund lower company tax rates
Historically, Switzerland has offered certain foreign companies special preferential tax deals in order to attract them. In response to international pressure, the current system is to be phased out replacing preferential tax rates with lower universal ones in the hope that these companies will stay. The central challenge is how to cover the tax revenue […]
New Swiss company tax reform plan well received in Brussels
The Swiss government’s company tax reform plans have been reborn after the last plan met with defeat in a popular vote on 12 February 2017. The new plan, dubbed “Tax proposal 17”, aims to avoid issues that bedeviled the last project. Last time many were concerned by the potential financial impact of lower company tax rates, and […]
Uncertainty and concern follow voter rejection of Switzerland’s company tax reform
Speaking to Tribune de Genève, Serge Dal Busco, Geneva’s minister of finance, voiced his concerns about last Sunday’s rejection of Switzerland’s planned company tax reform. At the same time he remains optimistic about the chances of a new federal corporate tax reform project. His biggest concern is that Bern might backtrack on its promise to […]
Vaud moves ahead with phase out of controversial Swiss tax deals
After nearly ten years of European Union (EU). OECD and G20 opposition to certain controversial Swiss tax structures, Switzerland’s government agreed a deal in 2014 to do away with such arrangements. Under current rules Swiss cantons can offer preferential tax rates to certain companies, mostly multinationals with most of their activity abroad. This is now changing. What […]
Swiss tax revolution
The question facing the Swiss federal government is how to keep Swiss corporate taxes attractive without offering foreign companies preferential tax rates, a system that the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) and the European Union (EU) will no longer tolerate. The Swiss Federal Council, the seven-member executive council which constitutes the federal government, […]