Profit shifting from Nigeria to Europe: The impact on human rights.

IF 2.5 PLOS global public health Pub Date : 2025-03-19 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1371/journal.pgph.0004218
Rachel Etter-Phoya, Stuart Murray, Stephen Hall, Michael Masiya, Bernadette O'Hare
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Abstract

The United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights states that everyone is entitled to economic and social rights essential to survive and thrive (Articles 25 and 26) and everyone is entitled to a social and international order in which their rights and freedom can be realised (Article 28). These rights must be ensured through national efforts and international cooperation (Article 22), but many millions of people worldwide do not access their rights, including the right to clean drinking water, safe sanitation, healthcare, and education. Government revenue from taxes plays a crucial role in ensuring these rights. However, globally, 10% of corporate tax revenue is lost because multinational corporations shift their profits from where they operate. This study examines the impact of profit shifting on tax revenue in Nigeria, focussing on access to economic and social rights and governance. It estimates the impact of revenue gains made on profits shifted from Nigeria to European tax havens, using data on profits shifted published by Wier and Zucman in 2022 and the Government Revenue and Development Estimations (GRADE) model for the estimations. The findings reveal that if the Nigerian government had additional revenue equivalent to tax losses, an additional 500,000 Nigerians would have their right to drink clean water and nearly 800,000 their right to use basic sanitation each day, 150,000 children would have their right to education, and 11 children would have their right to survive each day (amounting to 4,063 children each year). Increased revenue would also improve governance. In contrast, the gains European tax havens make as destinations for shifted profits in terms of rights are almost negligible, given that almost all Europeans have those economic and social rights discussed in this paper fulfilled. The tax reforms championed by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), including 27 European member nations, to tackle aggressive corporate tax avoidance and tax evasion-in short, tax abuse-fall short of ensuring a suitable international order for rights to be achieved. To remedy this, all European countries must support negotiations on international tax cooperation at the United Nations. This should include reforms on regulating multinational corporations, particularly through unitary taxation with formulary apportionment. In the short- and medium-term, interim measures to mitigate the harmful impacts of profit shifting are necessary. Countries must take steps to raise the global minimum corporate tax rate, introduce unilateral measures to tax multinational corporations, improve tax transparency and information sharing with lower-income countries, and strengthen anti-avoidance rules.

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利润从尼日利亚转移到欧洲:对人权的影响。
《联合国世界人权宣言》指出,每个人都有权享有生存和发展所必需的经济和社会权利(第25条和第26条),每个人都有权享有能够实现其权利和自由的社会和国际秩序(第28条)。这些权利必须通过国家努力和国际合作来确保(第22条),但全世界有数百万人无法获得其权利,包括获得清洁饮用水、安全卫生设施、医疗保健和教育的权利。政府的税收收入在保障这些权利方面起着至关重要的作用。然而,在全球范围内,由于跨国公司将利润从其经营所在地转移,10%的企业税收损失。本研究考察了利润转移对尼日利亚税收的影响,重点关注经济和社会权利及治理的获取。它使用Wier和Zucman在2022年发布的利润转移数据以及用于估计的政府收入和发展估计(GRADE)模型,估计了从尼日利亚转移到欧洲避税天堂的利润所产生的收入增长的影响。调查结果显示,如果尼日利亚政府的额外收入相当于税收损失,那么每天将有50万尼日利亚人有饮用清洁水的权利,近80万人有使用基本卫生设施的权利,15万儿童有受教育的权利,每天有11名儿童有生存的权利(相当于每年有4063名儿童)。增加收入也会改善治理。相比之下,考虑到几乎所有欧洲人都实现了本文所讨论的那些经济和社会权利,欧洲避税天堂作为转移利润的目的地所获得的收益在权利方面几乎可以忽略不计。经济合作与发展组织(OECD)倡导的税收改革,包括27个欧洲成员国,旨在解决激进的企业避税和逃税——简而言之,税收滥用——未能确保一个适当的国际秩序来实现权利。为了解决这个问题,所有欧洲国家都必须支持在联合国就国际税收合作进行谈判。这应包括管理跨国公司的改革,特别是通过定额分配的单一税收。在短期和中期,有必要采取临时措施来减轻利润转移的有害影响。各国必须采取措施提高全球最低企业税率,采取单边措施对跨国公司征税,提高税收透明度,加强与低收入国家的信息共享,加强反避税规则。
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