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They must also consider the bigger picture and how the overarching global trends of global trade, transformation and sustainability shape the indirect tax function. This is the fourth of a four part series of articles that dive deep into each trend to help leaders frame the indirect tax discussion within their business, navigate the challenges and grasp the opportunities.
Tax authorities have an increasingly important role in encouraging citizens and businesses to make the necessary changes in lifestyle, manufacturing, packaging and purchasing decisions that help meet sustainability targets. For years governments have been leveraging indirect tax policies to achieve sustainability targets, and that trend is likely to continue in 2023 and beyond.
Governments use both the policy stick – for example, carbon levies, plastic packaging and excise taxes, waste management fees – and the carrot – for example, incentives for sustainable development. Indirect tax and trade functions are often at the heart of these policy decisions.
As the sustainability imperative grows, an increasing number of countries are vying to present themselves as the most attractive places to grow renewable industries. The European Commission recently unveiled its “Green Deal Industrial Plan” in part to match the United States (US) and China's clean subsidy push. The European Union (EU) bloc is set to loosen state aid rules on tax credits for green investment. The new measures give flexibility in providing aid to companies in the green and renewable energy sector and those involved in the decarbonization of industry. There will also be tax breaks for companies in strategic net-zero sectors.
The EU package is a response to a landmark US spending bill last year that funnels US$370b into subsidies for the US's energy transition. The Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) offers huge subsidies and tax credits to companies investing in electric vehicles and renewable energy technologies, such as batteries, solar panels and wind turbines, as long as the products and parts they manufacture are made in the US. Previously, there was a difference in green strategy, with the US policy of incentives compared to the EU policy of penalties and taxes. Now the EU is offering wealth of opportunities for grants, incentives, tax benefits and so on. And this is the time for businesses to explore them. But at the same time, new legislation is being introduced that requires businesses to prepare for upcoming compliance obligations and potential cost burdens.
This large and ever-evolving group of taxes and incentives creates pressure on businesses and their tax departments as the environmental tax landscape is evolving rapidly. One challenge for companies is keeping abreast of all the developments in every region in real-time. On top of that, they must understand how to comply and avoid falling foul of the new regulations as they evolve. They must understand and respond to the associated costs, which significantly add to the workload and spending on compliance activities while identifying the crucial opportunities to use tax credits and grants to fund their organizations' green ambitions.
Whose job is it?
The key for businesses is to assign responsibility and accountability effectively in response to these new measures. The risk is that they need to fit neatly into historic indirect tax capability, says Alwyn Hopkins, EY UK&I Advanced Manufacturing and Mobility (AM&M) Sustainability Leader, Ernst & Young LLP. "Take someone responsible for monitoring the new regimes and identifying ones that will potentially impact you. That's where we see businesses often falling down."