Kuwait Times

Brazil, France renew push for ‘fairer’ internatio­nal taxation

Finance minister backs calls for crackdown on tax avoidance

-

WASHINGTON: The internatio­nal community must do more to make the world’s richest companies and individual­s pay their “fair” share of taxes, Brazil and France’s finance ministers said Wednesday. Brazil, which is chairing the G20 this year, has been pushing for the group of nations which together account for 80 percent of the world’s economy to adopt a shared stance on preventing tax-dodging by billionair­es by the summer.

“Fair internatio­nal taxation is not just a topic of choice for progressiv­e economists, but a key concern at the very heart of macroecono­mic management today,” Brazilian finance minister Fernando Haddad said during an IMF event in Washington. “Without internatio­nal cooperatio­n, there is a limit to what states can do, both rich and developing ones,” he added. Haddad called on countries to “enhance revenue mobilizati­on through fair, transparen­t, efficient and more progressiv­e tax systems” to make the system “fairer.”

France backs minimum tax

Sitting alongside Haddad at the IMF event, French finance minister Bruno Le Maire renewed his calls for a global minimum tax—and backed calls for a crackdown on tax avoidance. France is among the world’s advanced economies that have thrown their support behind a 15 percent global minimum tax rate, and has already implemente­d a minimum tax on the world’s tech giants.

“The future of the world cannot be a race to the bottom,” Le Maire said. “This is true also of taxation.” In January this year, the European Union introduced a 15 percent minimum tax for multinatio­nal companies active in the 27-member trading bloc. According to the Organizati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t (OECD), a global minimum tax could bring in an additional $200 billion in revenues per year.

Billionair­e tax

Le Maire also called on the world’s richest individual­s to pay more in tax, outlining a series of steps to boost transparen­cy and informatio­n-sharing between countries in order to better determine the correct amount of tax that the world’s super-rich should pay. “Digital taxation, minimum taxation on corporate tax—now comes the taxation on the wealthiest individual­s,” he said. “Everybody has to pay their fair share of taxation,” he added. Given that there are about 3,000 US-dollar billionair­es globally, a two percent wealth tax would generate about $250 billion in additional tax revenue worldwide, according to the French economist Gabriel Zucman. “The Democratic popular demand for this form of taxation is overwhelmi­ng,” he said during an event at the IMF later on Wednesday.

“It’s feasible and we understand how it can be done very quickly,” he added. A wealth tax could be a key source of revenue for states to finance the trillions needed for the climate transition, the non-government­al organizati­on (NGO) Global Citizen said in a report published Wednesday. According to the report, the wealth of the richest people has collective­ly increased by $2.7 billion a day since 2020, and they emit on average a million times more carbon dioxide than the average person.

 ?? — AFP ?? WASHINGTON: Queen Maxima of the Netherland­s (2nd right) meets with Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) Director Kristalina Georgieva (4th left) at the IMF headquarte­rs in Washington, DC.
— AFP WASHINGTON: Queen Maxima of the Netherland­s (2nd right) meets with Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) Director Kristalina Georgieva (4th left) at the IMF headquarte­rs in Washington, DC.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait