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Published: 04 Nov 2008 04:53:57 PST

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Finland

Business Environment

Business practices

For further information
A guide to Finnish customs and manners by Virtual Finland
For further information
Finnish business culture as seen by the Kwintessential website
For further information
Finnish business culture as seen by the Executiveplanet website
Closed hours and days
Offices are closed on Saturday and Sunday.

Public holidays

New Year’s Day January 1
Epiphany January 6
Good Friday End of March or April, changes according to the year
Easter Sunday and Monday following the Good Friday
May Day May 1
Ascension Day May, changes according to the year
Whitsun May, changes according to the year
Mid-Summer Day End of June, changes according to the year
All Saints’ Day End of October or beginning of November, changes according to the year
Independence Day December 6
Christmas Eve and Day December 24-25
Boxing Day December 26
Compensation day
No compensation for public holidays that fall on Saturday or Sunday.
 

Periods when companies usually close

Christmas One week between Christmas and New Year
Summer holidays 1-4 weeks starting from Midsummer (around June 24)

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Standards

National standards organizations
Finnish Standards Association (SFS)
Integration in the international standards network
The Finnish Standards Association SFS and its standards-writing bodies, the Finnish Electrotechnical Standards Association and Finnish Communications Regulatory Authority are members of the European standards organizations CEN, CENELEC and ETSI. SFS is also a member of the International Organization ISO and IEC.
Classification of standards
SFS (or SFS-EN) + 4 or more digits showing the technical area and the rank in the division.
Online consultation of standards
National SFS Standards are sold in Finland only by SFS. Distribution of SFS standards abroad is handled by national ISO member bodies. SFS standards can be viewed in the Catalogue of SFS Standards or downloaded from the online shop of SFS.
Certification organizations
Finnish Standards Association (SFS)

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Legal framework

Independence of justice
Yes
Equal treatment of nationals and foreigners
Yes
The language of justice
Finnish and Swedish
Having recourse to an interpreter
In connection with certain matters involving the fundamental rights of an individual, such as taking a child into custody, the party concerned is, according to the Language Act, always entitled to use his or her own language regardless of the language of the municipality. If necessary, interpreters can be used.
Sources of the law and legal similarities
Finland has a parliamentary system. The main source of the law is the constitution of March 2000. The legal system is based on civil law system which originates from the Swedish law. European Community law is directly applicable and takes precedence over national legislation. The country accepts compulsory ICJ jurisdiction, but with reservations.
Consulting national laws online
Constitution of Finland
Legislation in Finland

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Intellectual Property

National organizations
Ministry of Education and Culture
National Board of Patents and Registration of Finland (NBPR)
Regional organizations
European Patent Office
International membership
Member of the WIPO
Signatory to the Paris Convention
Membership to TRIPS

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National regulation and international agreements

Type of property Law Validity International agreements signed
Patent Patents act 20 years Patent Cooperation Treaty
Strasbourg agreement concerning the International Patent Classification
Trademark Trademarks act 10 years Trademark law treaty
Nice agreement concerning the International classification of goods and Services for the Purposes of the registration of Marks
Protocol relating to the Madrid Agreement concerning the International Registration of Marks
Design Registered designs act 5 years, renewable  
Copyright Copyright act Berne convention for the protection of Literary and Artistic Works
Convention for the Protection of Producers of Phonograms against unauthorized duplication of their phonograms
Rome convention for the protection of performers, producers of phonograms and Broadcasting organizations
WIPO copyright treaty
WIPO performances and Phonograms treaty
Industrial Models Act on utility model rights 4 years, renewable (maximum 10 years total)  

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Tax rates

Consumption taxes

Nature of the tax
Value-added tax
Tax rate
22%
Reduced tax rate
A 17% rate applies to basic foodstuff and animal feed.
An 8% rate applies to passenger transport, books, medicines, accommodation services and entry fees to cultural events.
Other consumption taxes
Exceptions include the sale or rental of immovable property, financial and insurance services, healthcare and education.

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Corporate taxes

Tax rate
Tax rate for foreign companies
Finnish companies are taxed on their worldwide income; non-resident companies are taxed only on income sourced in Finland.
Capital gains taxation
The tax rate on capital gains is 26%.
Main allowable deductions and tax credit
Deductions normally include expenses that are incurred to generate or retain the company’s income such as payments of interest and royalties, realized foreign-exchange losses, 50% of entertainment costs, irrevocable orders to buy goods, doubtful sales receivables, fees for establishing an organization and reorganization costs, R&D expenses, etc.
Other corporate taxes
None

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Individual taxes

Tax rate
Allowable deductions and tax credit
The following deductions are allowable:
- expenses incurred in excess of EUR500 for traveling to and from work;
- statutory pension insurance and unemployment insurance premiums;
- interest on a loan if the loan was used to buy a permanent home or property that is used to acquire income;
- capital losses;
- medical expenses and alimony are not deductible, but there is a deductible maintenance allowance of EUR80 per child from earned income for each child living with a former spouse.
Special expatriate tax regime
A foreign expert with special expertise may choose to be taxed at a flat rate of 35% if that person’s regular monthly cash salary exceeds EUR5,800 (except for teachers and researchers) for 48 months. The application has to be filed within 90 days from the start of the work in Finland.

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Double taxation treaties

Countries with whom a double taxation treaty have been signed
Ministry of Finance: Finland's tax treaties
Whithholding taxes
Bilateral agreement

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Accounting rules

Tax year
From January 1st to December 31st
Accounting standards
The Finnish Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) is a commonly used accounting standard in Finland. Companies that are quoted in the stock-exchange have to use the IAS/IFRS standards (EU obligation since 2005).
Accounting regulation bodies
The European Federation of Accountants
Chamber of Commerce
Accounting reports
The accounting report is made annually. In the report intangible assets can be shown in the balance sheet or in expenses in the profit and loss account (choice of the company). Physical fixed assets must be estimated at the original or production cost. Current assets have to appear at the lower cost and value of the market. Stocks are estimated at the weighed average cost or by the FIFO method.
Publication
Law refers to the notion of "good accounting method" as regards the methods of companies for the elaboration of financial status. All companies have to send a copy of their annual report to the legal authorities of the country. This annual report must contain a profit and loss account, a balance sheet and an annual report.
Professional accountancy bodies
The Finnish Institute of Authorised Public Accountants (KHT-yhdistys ry)
HTM-tilintarkastajat ry (in Finnish only)
Certification and auditing
Central Chamber of Commerce and Local Chambers of Commerce
Accounting news
Accounting news (in Finnish only)

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Source: FITA

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