EU Commissioner tells the Isle of Man & Malta to rethink their yacht and jet VAT schemes.

PARIS (Reuters) - The European Commission has told the Isle of Man and Malta to change rules relating to value added tax (VAT) on yachts and private jets or face possible financial sanctions, the EU commissioner for taxation said on Friday.

Pierre Moscovici said he had written three weeks ago to the finance minister about the Isle of Man and to the Maltese minister about VAT on yachts and private jets.

There are practices that we have reasons to think are suspect,” Moscovici told French television BFM TV.

“I asked that the rules be changed and if they are not, the European Commission will launch an infringement procedure that can bear extremely heavy financial sanctions,” he said.

EU officials said the Isle of Man, which is under British sovereignty but self-governing, is suspected of exempting from VAT buyers of jets even when there is no grounds to grant the waiver.

If a jet is bought for business reasons, no VAT is applied, but on the Isle of Man the Commission believes authorities do not check sufficiently whether buyers effectively use the planes for business or private reasons. In the latter case, VAT should be paid.

In response, Britain’s finance ministry said tax administration on the Isle of Man was the responsibility of the authorities there.

“We are working closely with them to look into how VAT is paid on aircraft and yachts, and we intend to reply to the EU Commission by the end of the year,” a spokesperson said in a statement.

Malta is under scrutiny because of its rules on luxury yachts that slash the VAT rate applied to bigger ships on the grounds they are used mostly in international waters, an EU official said.

The release last week of the “Paradise Papers”, a trove of financial documents mostly from offshore law firm Appleby, has refocused attention on the Isle of Man, a British crown dependency, and Malta among other offshore banking centers.

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