Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Fiscal Barriers to Trade in Goods
- RECAP ON INTERNAL MARKET
- Art 26 TFEU
- 1. The Union shall adopt measures with the
aim of establishing or ensuring the functioning
of the internal market, in accordance with the
relevant provisions of the Treaties.
- 2. The internal market shall
comprise an area without
internal frontiers in which
the free movement of
goods, persons, services
and capital is ensure in
accordance with the
provisions of the Treaties
- FISCAL v NON-FISCAL
BARRIERS AND PROHIBITORS
- Fiscal
- 1. Impose a
levy on wine as
it crosses the
border -
prohibits
customs
duties (Arts
28-32 TFEU)
- 2. Impose a
levy on all
imports of
alcohol to fund
a study into
alcoholism -
prohibits
charges
having an
equivalent
effect to
customs
duties (Arts
28-32 TFEU)
- 3. Impose a tax
on all alcohol
but a higher tax
on imported
wine than
domestically
produced beer -
prohibits
discriminatory
internal taxation
(Arts 110-113)
- Non-fiscal
- 1. Ban the import of wine from other MS -
prohibits quantitative restrictions on
imports and exports (Arts 34-36 TFEU)
- 2. Impose a quota on the quantity of wine that may be
imported into the UK annually - prohibits measures having an
equivalent effect to quantitative restrictions (Arts 34-36 TFEU)
- 3. Introduce
technical rules
which wine must
comply with - ibid.
- CREATING A
CUSTOMS UNION
AND DEALING
WITH CHARGES
- Creating of a Customs Union
- Art 28 TFEU (ex Art 23 EC) - 'The Union
shall be based on a customs union which
shall cover all trade in goods and which
shall involve the prohibition between MS of
CDs on imports and exports and of all
charges having equivalent effect (CHEEs),
and the adoption of a common customs
tariff in their relations with third countries'.
- Exclusive competence of
the EU - Art 3 TFEU. Only
EU can legislate on this.
- Art 28 TFEU
- Internal aspect -
prohibition of
customs duties
on imports and
exports and
charges having
an equivalent
effect to a
customs duty
(CHEE)
- External aspect
- adoption of a
common
customs tariff in
their relations
with third
countries
(non-EU
countries)
- Can free and fair trade work together?
Trading powers - UK v smaller countries.
Who is more likely to get a trading deal?
- Defining goods
- '...products capable of being valued in money
and which are capable, as such, of forming
the subject of commercial transactions.'
- Case 7/68 Commission v Italy (Italian Art) [1968]
- This also includes industrial and agricultural products subject to Arts 39-44 TFEU
- Art 30 TFEU
- 'Customs duties on
imports and exports
and charges having
equivalent effect shall
be prohibited by MS.'
- Vertically directly effective - Van Gend en Loos [1963] (increase in customs duties)
- What is a CHEE?
- Any pecuniary charge, however, small, and whatever its designation and mode of
application, which is imposed unilaterally on goods by reason of the fact that they
cross a frontier and which is not a CD in the strict sense, constitutes a CHEE.
- Case 24/68 Commission v Italy (Statistical
Levy) [1969] - wanted to do stats study on
imports and charged importers. Not allowed.
- Will be a CHEE 'even if it is not imposed for the benefit of the state,
is not discriminatory or protective in effect, and if the product in which
the charge is imposed is not in competition with any domestic product.'
- Treaty does not clarify if certain
circumstances are legitimate to charge.
Seems so expansive that NO
circumstances allow charges.
- Cases 2&3/69 Sociaal
Fonds voor de
Diamantarbeiders [1969]
- Belgium charging for
the import of diamonds
for the benefit and
welfare of diamond
workers
- Are CHEE ever legit? Case 18/87 Commission v Germany (Live Animals) [1988]
- a) It it constitutes payment
for a service in fact
rendered to the economic
operator of a sum in
proportion to the service
- i. Benefit must be specific to the individual trader (and not traders in general)
- ii. Sum paid must be proportionate to the benefit received
- Cases
- Case 24/68 Commission v Italy (Statistical Levy) [1969]
- Case 63/74 Cadsky v ICE [1975]
- Case 170/88 Ford España v Spain [1989]
- Case 132/82
Commission v
Belgium [1983]
- b) If it attaches to
inspections carried out to
fulfil obligations imposed by
Union (or international) law
- i. Union law (secondary legislation) - Case 46/76 Bauhuis v Netherlands [1977]
- Charge must be proportionate to the cost;
inspections must be obligatory and uniform;
prescribed by EU law in the interests of the EU; and
promote the FMG by neutralising unilateral
measures adopted in accordance with Art 30 TFEU.
- ii. International law - Case 89/76 Commission v Netherlands [1977]
- Prescribed by international law; and charge is proportionate to the cost.
- c) If it relates to a system of
internal dues applied
systematically and in
accordance with the same
criteria to domestic products
and imported products alike (art
110!)
- If it is
internal
taxation,
apply Art
110 TFEU!
- Art 30 and 110
are mutually
exclusive
- Case
57/65
Lutticke v
HZA
Saarlouis
[1966]
- Legal effect of an
infringement of Art 30
TFEU
- CD or CHEE prohibited under Art 30 TFEU is unlawful per se
- The exceptions set out for non-fisc barriers to trade under Art 36 TFEU do NOT apply to fisc barriers of trade.
- External aspect
- Art 28 TFEU - the customs
union includes the adoption
of a common customs tariff
in relations with third
countries
- Arts 31 and 32 provide for the adoption
of a common customs tariff (CCT/CET)
- EU has also developed
a common commercial
policy (CCP) towards
third countries (Art 3
and 206-207 TFEU)
- INTERNAL TAXATION
- Art 110(1) TFEU
- No MS shall impose, directly or
indirectly, on the products of other MS
any internal taxation of any kind in
excess of that imposed directly or
indirectly on similar domestic products
- Broadly defined
- Directly
effective - Case
57/65 Lutticke v
HZA Saarlouis
[1966]
- Art 110(2)
TFEU
- Furthermore, no MS shall
impose on the products of
other MS any internal
taxation of such a nature as
to afford indirect protection
to other products
- Discrimination that
protects their goods.
- Directly effective -
Case 27/67 Firma
Fink-Frucht GmbH v
HZA Munchen
Landsbergerstrasse
[1968]
- Types of
discriminatory
taxation
- Direct - where imports and domestic products are explicitly
treated differently; automatically unlawful and cannot be justified
- Tax burden must
not differ
according to the
origin of the good
(e.g. rate,
method/stage of
collection,
sanctions, effect
etc.)
- Case 55/79 Commission v Ireland
[1980]; Case 127/75 Bobie v HZA
Aachen-Nord [1976]
- Indirect - there is no
explicit discrimination, but
the tax burden on imports
is greater; may be
objectively justifiable
- Case 112/85 Humblot
v Directeur des
Services Fiscaux [1985]
- French - gradation of tax.
Greater engine power =
great rate of tax.
Justifiable. However -
steep rise between largest
engines made in France v
those imported from
Germany. Significant
premium on imported car.
Indirect discrimination
against importing countries
and indirect protection for
French industry.
- Case 433/85 Feldain v
Direceur des Services
Fiscaux [1987]
- Objective
justification
under Art 110
TFEU
- Case 140/79 Chemical
Farmaceutici v DAF SpA [1981]
(synthetic ethanol); Case
196/85 Commission v France
[1987] (sweet wines); Case
C-132/88 Commission v Greece
[1990] (taxes on engine size)
- Relationship
between paras (1)
and (2) of Art 110
TFEU
- (1) - where domestic
goods and imports are
deemed to be SIMILAR,
the tax burden must be
equalised (does not
mean equalling benefit;
treating them equally
badly!)
- 'Similar goods' - goods in the same tax
classification - Case 27/67 Fink-Frucht GmbH [1968]
- Similar - NOT
identical.
- Have similar characteristics and meet the same needs from the
point of view of the consumer - Case 45/75 Rewe [1976]
- Case 243/84 John Walker [1986] (luxury products) - said to look at objective characteristics of the product,
alcohol content, method of manufacture, and consumer perception of the product
- (2) - where
domestic and
imported goods are
not similar, but IN
COMPETITION with
one another, the tax
must not indirectly
protect the domestic
product.
- Is there a competitive relationship between the goods? Actual or
potential. 1. Is there a degree of substitution between the products? If
so, a competitive relationship exists. 2. Is the tax system indirectly
protecting the domestic product? If so, this protective effect must be
removed...unless objectively justified.
- Case 170/78
Commission v
UK (Beer and
Wine) [1983]
- RELATIONSHIP
BETWEEN ARTS 30
AND 110
- When is a tax a 'genuine tax'?
- A levy will fall under Art 110 TFEU if it relates to
'a general system of internal dues applied
systematically and in accordance with objective
criteria irrespective of the origin of the product' -
Case 90/79 Commission v France [1981]
- So how do we distinguish
a CHEE from a tax?
- Art 30
TFEU
- Imposed on
goods as they
cross the
frontier
- Specific charge on
the imported/exported
good to the exclusion
of domestic goods
- Unlawful per se
- Art
110
TFEU
- Imposed
within
the MS
- Imposed as
part of the
internal
taxation
system
- Prohibited only if
discriminatory
- Key questions:
- Is a charge
imposed at
the border?
- Case
29/87
Dansk
Denkavit
[1988]
- Will mostly be
classed as a
CHEE BUT...
- ...only very exceptionally will monies taken at a border be a tax.
- Therefore
usually Art
30.
- Is a charge
imposed on
an import
which the
importing
MS does not
produce (i.e.
exotic
imports)?
- Which provision applies where a MS
imposes a tax on an import, but there is no
domestic production of that product?
- Art 110 - but why?
- No domestic product you are seeking to
protect, BUT it may then come into competition.
- Case 193/85 Cooperativa Co-frutta SRL v
Amministrazione delle Finanze dello Stato [1987]
- Is all of part of the
charge refunded to
domestic traders?
- Apply Art 30 TFEU if:
- The sole purpose of the refund is to finance activities which benefit the taxed domestic product
- The product which has been taxed and the product benefitting from the charge must be the same
- Refund of the charge imposed on the domestic product is made in full
- APPLYING
ART 110
- Ensure it is a
genuine TAX
rather than a
customs duty
or a charge
having
equivalent
effect. Then...
- Are the
products in
question
similar?
- TEST - objective
characteristics and
consumer needs
- If YES, the tax BURDEN must be the
same (treating them just as badly)
- If not similar, is there a
competitive relationship
between the products?
- Is there a degree
of
substitutability?
- If so, does the tax burden indirectly protect the
domestic good? If so, remove the protective effect.
- If not, it is not caught by Art 110.
- CONCLUSIONS
- Customs union is
the foundation of
the internal market
- Internal aspect - Art 30 and 110
TFEU are mutually exclusive
and have direct effect -
interpreted strictly by the CJEU
- External aspect - a strong 'ring-fence'
around the 28 MS is crucial
- EU has
exclusive
competence
in adopting a
common
commercial
policy with
third
countries