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published on 17 January 2018
Officially adopted on 30 December 2017, the French Finance Act for 2018 adjusts the French transfer pricing documentation requirements to comply with the standards provided by the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) in the Action 13 of its Plan on Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS).
This new measure is applicable to financial years opened as from 1 January 2018 and its exact terms of application should be detailed in a forthcoming decree.
Article 107 of the Finance Act only modifies the content of the ”complete” transfer pricing documentation which must be delivered by large enterprises at the opening of a tax audit procedure, upon request from a tax inspector (Article L. 13 AA of the French Tax Procedure Code). The regimes applicable to the French ‘light’ transfer pricing documentation (Article 223 quinquies B of the French tax code) and Country-by-Country Reporting (Article 223 quinquies C) remain unchanged.
Failure to provide a comprehensive documentation within 30 days from the formal notice of the tax inspector may, for each audited year, trigger a tax penalty amounting to the highest of 0.5% of the volume of undocumented transactions or 5% of the tax adjustments resulting from the transfer pricing reassessment; with a minimum of EUR 10 000 per audited year.
The Finance Act for 2018 formally transposes the OECD concepts of ”master file” and ”local file”, and their respective content, into French domestic law. It was considered that the current regime no longer complies with international standard.
As a result, the information formally required by law is much more detailed than under the current regime.
With respect to the content of the complete transfer pricing documentation, the changes relate essentially to the information which must be provided on intangibles and intercompany financial activities of the group:
In addition to details on the intercompany financing between group affiliates (already required), large enterprises must now provide information on ”how the group is financed, including important financing arrangements with unrelated lenders” (external financing).
The alignment of the French transfer pricing documentation requirements to the international standard should constitute a simplification for international groups. French companies that do not apply the OECD Model at this time must however comply with the new regime and should be in a position to provide the French Tax Authorities with a transfer pricing documentation consistent with the OECD Model as from financial year 2018 (in practice the documentation will have to be provided in case of tax audit regarding financial year 2018 and following, i.e. as from 2019.
Aurélia Froissart
Partner
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