Switzerland has again improved its performance in a comparison of corporate
tax rates across the world by tax and business advisory firm KPMG, which also
found that South-Eastern European states are once again at the top of the table.
For the first time, the most attractive European business location as regards
taxation is Montenegro, where corporations pay only 9% tax on their profits,
followed by other countries in South-Eastern Europe where the tax stands at
10% – Bulgaria, Cyprus, Serbia, Albania, and Bosnia and Herzegovina.
This is what emerges from the latest survey on taxes on profit and sales around
the world, following analyses conducted by KPMG in over 100 countries.
The international comparison of corporate tax rates in 2008 again showed Switzerland
significantly improving its position. While the median rate for tax on profit
(the average of all 26 cantons) was 20.6% in 2007, it is now 19.2%, a reduction
of 1.4%.
In 2007, the rates in the cantons varied from 13.1 to 29.1%, but corporate
tax rates this year are showing a significant downward trend, sinking to between
12.7 and 24.2%, with the two cantons with the lowest rate – Obwalden and
Appenzell-Ausserrhoden, both at 12.7% – almost catching up with Ireland,
which has the lowest rate in Western Europe (12.5%).
Far and away the most substantial cuts in corporate tax have been implemented
this year by Grisons (-10.2%), Schaffhausen (-6.8%), Appenzell-Ausserrhoden
(-5.3%) and Basel-Land (-5%). Grisons has thus leaped from its former position
at the bottom of the table to 12th in the inter-cantonal ranking.
Last year, the median corporate tax rate (the average of all countries) was
26.9%, but it now stands at 25.9% – down 1%.
As KPMG reported earlier this week, comparison of economic areas around the world (as an average of
the countries in each area) shows that companies looking for the lowest corporate
tax rates will still find them in the member states of the European Union, where
rates have gone down by 1% to 23.2 % from 2007 to 2008. By comparison, companies
in the Asia-Pacific region currently reckon with a 28.4% average across the
countries there. Even though the rates have been cut by 0.8% in the last year,
they are still the highest among the global economic areas.
Commenting on the findings of the latest corporate tax rate survey, Jorg Walker,
Head of Tax at KPMG Switzerland observed:
“In a world in which companies and their profits are constantly becoming
more mobile, more and more states are changing over from taxing company profits,
preferring instead to put the taxation of sales – and hence of goods and
services – at the heart of their budget planning. The result of this is
that tax falls, not on companies’ profits, but on consumption, and it
is the consumers in the various countries who end up footing the bill."
Walker added:
“Switzerland is still resisting this trend, and is one of the few countries
to do so. Our country is succeeding in attracting capital imports by means of
constant cuts in corporate tax rates and nothing else – without relying
on cross-subsidization by raising VAT rates in the way some of our neighbours
do.”