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Tax Transformation
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More than half of businesses aren’t meeting their tax transformation goals. Learn why digitization requires a reboot of your transformation approach.
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Among the 2,127 tax and finance executives in 47 jurisdictions who responded to the survey, 84% say that implementing or improving an existing global framework approach to tax risk and controversy management would add “some or significant” value to their business in the next two years. Yet more than six in 10 of those surveyed (61%) say their tax functions are only sometimes, rarely or never involved by executive leadership in significant changes to existing business activities such as business model changes, new products and new services — increasing the risk of unexpected tax exposure for those activities.
This juxtaposition is notable and a cause for concern because the most senior tax leaders among the respondents (holding the ranks of Vice-President of Tax, Global Tax Director or similar) are anticipating that the number and intensity of audits will grow by 79% in the next two years compared with the previous two. Despite this, 70% of the same group said their company doesn’t have complete visibility of all their ongoing disputes globally. This disconnect also has the potential to make it difficult to respond to new geopolitical, economic and tax policy changes that are adding unprecedented layers of tax risk that must be managed.
“Strong and effective tax governance has rapidly become essential for all businesses,” says Luis Coronado, EY Global Tax Controversy Leader. “This is partly because tax authorities around the world are using the absence or presence of good governance principles in tax as a way to segment taxpayers into different risk categories. It’s also because tax functions are recognizing that a good tax governance framework offers them many opportunities to help their organizations build long-term value for stakeholders, including in the important Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) space.”
To navigate this new era of risk and controversy efficiently, businesses should strengthen their activity across three key areas:
- Enhancing their tax governance strategy, defining policies, roles, controls and accountabilities in clear, easily understood ways that better enable the effective management of both tax risk and tax controversy.
- Transforming their approach to tax and financial data management in a way that facilitates accurate and timely responses to ongoing reporting obligations, while also providing the tax function with awareness and valuable insight into both potential and ongoing tax disputes, mutual agreement procedures and tax litigation globally.
- Doing more to secure tax certainty at every opportunity, seeking out ways to manage tax risks while also taking advantage of the many proactive dispute prevention and resolution programs offered by tax authorities.