Stabroek News

The G7 tax clampdown and the end of hyper-globalizat­ion

- By Dani Rodrik

CAMBRIDGE – On June 5, the world’s leading economies announced an agreement that will bolster their ability to raise taxes on global corporatio­ns. The agreement still needs formal approval from a wider set of countries, and there remain many details to be worked out for it to be effective. Nonetheles­s, it would not be farfetched to describe the deal as historic.

The G7 agreement has two planks. First, it proposes a global minimum tax of 15% on the largest corporatio­ns. Second, a portion of these corporatio­ns’ global profits will be clawed back to countries where they do business, regardless of the location of their physical headquarte­rs.

These objectives are as clear an indication as any that hyper-globalizat­ion’s rules – under which countries must compete to offer global corporatio­ns ever-sweeter deals – are being re-written. Until very recently, it was opposition by the United States that stalled global tax harmonizat­ion. Now, by contrast, it was President Joe Biden’s administra­tion that pushed the deal.

Since the race to the bottom in corporate taxation began in the 1980s, the average statutory rate has come down from nearly 50% to around 24% in 2020. Many countries have generous loopholes and exemptions that reduce the effective tax rate to single digits. Even more damaging, global corporatio­ns have been able to shift profits to pure tax havens such as the British Virgin Islands, the Cayman Islands, or Bermuda, without having to move any of their actual operations there. Estimates by Gabriel Zucman of the University of California, Berkeley, reveal that an inordinate share of US corporatio­ns’ foreign profits are booked in such tax havens, where they employ only a few people.

Leaving questions about administra­tive feasibilit­y aside, the new agreement might face two opposing objections. Tax-justice advocates will criticize the global minimum of 15% as too low, while many developing countries will decry the global minimum as an unwarrante­d restrictio­n that will impede their ability to attract investment. The deal struck by the G7 appears to reflect both sets of concerns: the low threshold could assuage developing countries’ concerns, while the global apportionm­ent of profits will enable high-tax jurisdicti­ons to recoup some of their lost revenues.

Among developed countries, only Ireland, with a 12.5% statutory rate, falls below the proposed minimum. But there are small countries such as Moldova (12%), Paraguay (10%), and Uzbekistan (7.5%) that have set their rates particular­ly low to attract foreign investors, whom they see as a source of quality jobs and advanced technologi­es. In unhospitab­le investment environmen­ts, lower taxes are one of the few immediate ways in which government­s can compensate companies for the many disadvanta­ges they face. And effective tax rates in some Asian countries, such as Singapore (where the statutory rate is 17% but lower rates apply to some businesses), may end up on the wrong side of the minimum as well.

The argument for enforcing a common floor on corporate taxation is strongest when countries have similar preference­s and want to avoid a prisoner’s dilemma in which their only reason to lower taxes is to prevent capital from going elsewhere. This may apply to most developed countries, but certainly not all, as the examples of Ireland, the Netherland­s, and Singapore indicate. But when countries greatly differ in terms of levels of developmen­t and other characteri­stics, what is appropriat­e in one can be an obstacle to growth in another.

The US and high-tax European countries might complain about losing tax revenues when poorer countries maintain lower rates. But there is nothing to prevent such countries from taxing their home companies unilateral­ly at higher rates: they can simply apply the tax to domestic companies’ global profits, apportione­d by the share of revenues they derive from the domestic market. As Zucman has argued, each country can do this on its own, without global harmonizat­ion or even coordinati­on.

That is precisely what the second plank of the G7 agreement envisages (although it goes only part of the way). Under the agreement, the largest multinatio­nal companies with profit margins of at least 10% would have to allocate 20% of their global profits to countries where they sell their products and services.

The reason that the US prefers a global minimum, in addition to national apportionm­ent, is that it does not want to put its corporatio­ns at a disadvanta­ge relative to

This article was received from Project Syndicate, an internatio­nal not-for-profit associatio­n of newspapers dedicated to hosting a global debate on the key issues shaping our world.

other countries’ firms by taxing them at significan­tly higher rates. But this competitiv­e motive is no different from poor countries’ desire to attract investment. If the US prevails and the latter lose out, it will be because of relative power, not economic logic.

The Biden administra­tion initially wanted the global minimum tax set at 21%. The eventual compromise of 15% may be sufficient­ly low to minimize tensions with poorer countries and to allow the latter to sign on. The balance between global rules and national sovereignt­y may have been struck appropriat­ely in this instance.

But for countries like the US, this comes at the cost of lower tax revenues, unless the second plank of apportionm­ent is strengthen­ed. Ultimately, a global regime that enhances the ability of individual countries to design and administer their own tax systems, in light of their own needs and preference­s, is likely to prove more robust and durable than attempts at internatio­nal tax harmonizat­ion.

What is now clear is that countries that operate as pure tax havens – interested merely in shifting paper profits without bringing in new capital – have little to complain about. They have been doing global corporatio­ns a great service by facilitati­ng tax avoidance, at considerab­le costs to other countries treasuries. Global rules are fully justified to prevent such blatant beggar-thy-neighbour action. The G7 agreement is an important step in the right direction.

Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2021. www.project-syndicate.org

 ??  ?? Dani Rodrik, Professor of Internatio­nal Political Economy at Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government, is the author of Straight Talk on Trade: Ideas for a Sane World Economy.
Dani Rodrik, Professor of Internatio­nal Political Economy at Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government, is the author of Straight Talk on Trade: Ideas for a Sane World Economy.
 ??  ?? The inundated compound of a church in the Upper Pomeroon (Office of the President photo)
The inundated compound of a church in the Upper Pomeroon (Office of the President photo)

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