Mail & Guardian

Close ranks to end theft by corporates

Multinatio­nals and their subsidiari­es must be treated as single entities — and taxed locally

- José Antonio Ocampo

Over the past few years, leaks of documents such as the Panama Papers and the Paradise Papers have exposed the dark underbelly of globalisat­ion and provoked indignant denunciati­ons of tax avoidance around the world.

Workers have no choice but to pay their taxes but, apparently, multinatio­nal corporatio­ns and wealthy individual­s can get away with paying hardly anything.

The most shocking feature of today’s corporate tax avoidance schemes is that they are legal. When multinatio­nals create subsidiari­es, those entities are considered to be legally independen­t firms. A parent company can then set the prices of transactio­ns between its subsidiari­es to register its profits in low tax countries rather than where the original economic activity actually occurred.

This system of transfer pricing has fuelled competitio­n among countries to lower their corporate tax rates. And now that the United States has slashed its rate from 35% to 21%, the global race to the bottom will probably intensify. Politician­s in India, Mexico, Brazil and other developing countries are already calling for tax cuts of their own in order to remain competitiv­e, attract foreign investment and create or save jobs.

All countries have the right to ensure that they are competitiv­e in the global economy. They can do so in various ways, such as by investing in education, funding scientific and technologi­cal research, and building efficient infrastruc­ture.

Tax competitio­n is not the way to go, not least because it reduces the revenues needed to make such investment­s, particular­ly in developing countries, which, according to a 2015 Internatio­nal Monetary Fund report, lose out on more than $200-billion a year because of tax avoidance by multinatio­nals.

When countries create tax regimes that are effectivel­y designed to steal tax revenues from others, the result is also less money for education, healthcare, poverty reduction programmes and measures to address climate change.

This should not be allowed and multinatio­nals should stop adding to the problem by threatenin­g to leave countries unless taxes are cut. After all, a basic principle of corporate social responsibi­lity is that firms should pay their fair share of taxes wherever they operate.

The only way to stop the race to the bottom is through global co-operation. Three years ago, the Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t and the G20, a forum of the major economies that aim to develop policies to address global problems, took a step in the right direction by unveiling a package of reforms known as the Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) project. It introduced a system for reporting corporate profits and taxes paid on a country-by-country basis, and for facilitati­ng exchange of informatio­n among countries.

But the BEPS programme has proved to be insufficie­nt, particular­ly from developing countries’ perspectiv­e, because it failed to address the core problem — the transfer pricing system. Multinatio­nals are still allowed to salt their profits away in ultra-low tax jurisdicti­ons.

The Independen­t Commission for the Reform of Internatio­nal Corporate Taxation, which I chair, evaluated alternativ­e proposals to fix the current system. In a recent report, we found that the fairest and most effective way to allocate and tax corporate profits is to treat multinatio­nals as single firms doing business across internatio­nal borders. Thus, a firm’s total global profits would be taxed according to factors such as sales, employment and resource usage — all of which reflect real economic activity — in each jurisdicti­on. As it happens, the European Union is considerin­g a similar proposal, whereby it would treat all multinatio­nals operating within its borders as single firms.

Under such a system, countries would still compete for investment and corporate operations by lowering their corporate tax rates. That is why we propose that all countries agree on a minimum corporate tax rate of at least 15% to 25%.

Developing countries should not sit idly by. They will have to force change, starting with minimum corporate tax rates at the regional level. They can also take advantage of a system, already in place in Brazil, that establishe­s a minimum taxable income for local corporate affiliates, based on the gross margins of different types of transactio­ns.

It is past time that the United Nations took up this issue. Only a global co-operative effort can fix a broken system and end the destructiv­e race to the bottom on taxes. — Project Syndicate

 ??  ?? Pay your dues: A protester parodies wealthy capitalist­s during a demonstrat­ion in Paris in 2015 to denounce tax evasion. Developing countries are the hardest hit by this practice. Photo: Michael Bunel/NurPhoto
Pay your dues: A protester parodies wealthy capitalist­s during a demonstrat­ion in Paris in 2015 to denounce tax evasion. Developing countries are the hardest hit by this practice. Photo: Michael Bunel/NurPhoto

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