Austria has 91 tax agreements in force, as reported in its response to the Peer Review questionnaire. 20 of those agreements,1 the agreements with Belgium, Canada, Finland, France, India,2 Ireland, Israel, Japan, Kosovo*, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg,3 Malta, the Netherlands, Poland, Serbia, Singapore, the Slovak Republic, Slovenia and the United Kingdom, comply with the minimum standard.
Austria signed the MLI in 2017 and deposited its instrument of ratification on 22 September 2017. The MLI entered into force for Austria on 1 July 2018. Austria has not listed its agreements with Albania, Armenia, Australia, Bahrain, Barbados, Belize, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Brazil, Denmark, Egypt, Georgia, Iceland, Indonesia, Kazakhstan, Korea, Malaysia, Mongolia, Montenegro, Morocco, New Zealand, North Macedonia, Norway, Qatar, San Marino, Saudi Arabia, Sweden, Thailand, Tunisia, Ukraine, the United Arab Emirates, and Viet Nam. These agreements will therefore not, at this stage, be modified by the MLI. Albania, Armenia, Australia, Barbados, Belize, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Denmark, Egypt, Kazakhstan, Malaysia, Morocco, New Zealand, North Macedonia, San Marino, Saudi Arabia, Tunisia, Ukraine and the United Arab Emirates have listed their agreements with Austria under the MLI.
Austria has also signed bilateral complying instruments with respect to its agreements with Korea and Ukraine. The complying instrument with respect to its agreement with Ukraine has been ratified and the complying instrument with respect to its agreement with Korea is pending ratification.
Austria further indicated that bilateral negotiations would be pursued with respect to its agreements with Australia, Bahrain, Brazil, Egypt, Indonesia, New Zealand, Norway, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates.
Austria is implementing the minimum standard through the inclusion of the preamble statement and the PPT.4
The agreements modified by the MLI come into compliance with the minimum standard once the provisions of the MLI take effect.5