A range of current and impending developments (including the 15% global minimum tax and public country-by-country reporting) demand that tax governance frameworks adapt. This means rethinking how frameworks translate business activities into compliant tax filings, payments and the management of controversy.
Governance frameworks must evolve to integrate new data sources, address new and expanded reporting obligations and ensure coordinated action across global and local teams. New, principle-based approaches are essential to keep pace with these pressures.
Ultimately, tax governance is about human talent. It starts at the top with the C-suite, audit committee and executive leadership and extends through tax leaders and professionals in related functions, such as accounting, finance, treasury, legal, human resources, information technology and procurement.
Critically, good governance includes local tax and finance teams that accurately reflect business activities in financial systems and disclosures, tax filings and payments.
These professionals are also on the front line of managing inquiries, dispute prevention and management as well as litigation; situations that, without the right knowledge, can create significant financial and reputational risks.
The latest EY Tax Risk and Controversy Survey recognized the importance of strong, strategic tax governance, with more than two-thirds of respondents (69%) expecting their focus on tax governance to grow before 2025.
Many US multinationals, for example, start with a global view of tax governance, then tailor policies and training to local needs. Meanwhile, 84% of respondents said that implementing or improving a global framework for tax risk and controversy management would add “some” or “significant” value.
These pressures demand governance models that bridge local and global oversight while remaining resilient to disruption. Clear accountability is central to making governance work.
Everyone must understand what they are responsible for, when and where tasks must be completed, and who else is involved. This information must be shared across internal and external stakeholders to ensure tax risks are managed effectively.