The EU VAT system is regulated by a series of
European Union directives. The aim of the EU VAT directive (
Council Directive 2006/112/EC of 28 November 2006 on the common system of value-added tax) is to harmonize VATs within the
EU VAT area and specifies that VAT rates must be above a certain limit. It has several basic purposes: • Harmonization of VAT law (content) • Harmonization of content and layout of the VAT declaration • Regulation of accounting, providing a common legal accounting framework • Providing detailed invoices (article 226) and receipts (article 226b), meaning that member states have a common invoice framework • Regulation of
accounts payable • Regulation of
accounts receivable • Standard definition of national accountancy and administrative terms The VAT directive is published in all EU official languages.
Sixth Directive In 1977, the Council of the European Communities sought to harmonise the national VAT systems of its member states by issuing the Sixth Directive to provide a uniform basis of assessment and replacing the Second Directive promulgated in 1967. The Sixth Directive defined a taxable transaction within the EU VAT scheme as a transaction involving the supply of goods, the supply of services, and the importation of goods.
Eighth Directive The Eighth Directive, adopted in 1979, focuses on harmonising the legislation of the member states with respect to turnover taxes—provisions on the reimbursement of value added tax to taxable persons not established on the territory of the country (the provisions of this act allow a taxpayer of one member state to receive a VAT refund in another member state). Businesses can be required to register for VAT in EU member states other than the one in which they are based if they supply goods via mail order to those states over a certain threshold. Businesses established in one member state but receive supplies in another member state may be able to reclaim VAT charged in the second state. To do so, businesses have a
value added tax identification number.
Thirteenth Directive The Thirteenth VAT Directive, adopted in 1986, allows businesses established outside the EU to recover VAT in certain circumstances. The recast of the Sixth Directive retained all of the legal provisions of the Sixth Directive but also incorporated VAT provisions found in other Directives and rearranged text order to make it more readable. In addition, the Recast Directive codified certain other instruments including a Commission decision of 2000 relating to funding of the EU budget from with a percentage of the VAT amounts collected by each member state. Abuse criteria are identified by the jurisprudence of the
European Court of Justice (ECJ) developed from 2006 onwards: VAT cases of
Halifax and
University of Huddersfield, and subsequently
Part Service,
Ampliscientifica and Amplifin,
Tanoarch,
Weald Leasing and
RBS Deutschland. Such a jurisprudence implies an implicit judicial evaluation of the organizational structure chosen by the entrepreneurs and investors operating across multiple EU member states, in order to establish if the organization was appropriately ordered and necessary to their economic activities or "had the purpose of limiting their tax burdens". It is in contrast with the constitutional right to the
freedom of entrepreneurship. ==Supply of goods==