Bangkok Post

Tax act may bring $2tn back to the US

UN sees significan­t impact on global FDI

- NINA LARSON

GENEVA: The recent US tax overhaul could prompt US multinatio­nals to repatriate around $2 trillion, making a significan­t impact on global foreign direct investment, the UN said on Monday.

The forecast from the United Nations Conference on Trade and Developmen­t (Unctad) came just over a month after US President Donald Trump signed into law a sweeping and controvers­ial overhaul of the US tax code, offering dramatic tax cuts for corporatio­ns and temporary reductions for individual­s.

In its annual report on trends in foreign direct investment (FDI) — a measure of cross-border private sector investment­s — Unctad warned that the US tax reform package would have “significan­t implicatio­ns for global FDI patterns over the coming years.”

“The tax overhaul will affect the multinatio­nals and their affiliates,” James Zhan, who heads Unctad’s investment and enterprise division, told reporters in Geneva.

“The affected multinatio­nals account for nearly half of the some $26 trillion in current FDI stock, which measures the total level of global direct investment­s at a given point,’’ he said.

“The reform (could) lead to the repatriati­on of almost $2 trillion of returned earnings,” Zhan said, referring to the amount of easily-repatriate­d FDI cash US multinatio­nals are estimated to be holding abroad.

The new tax bill, which slashes the corporate tax rate to 21% from 35% previously, could entice some businesses to return with the promise of higher profits.

Unctad said the US move could lead to increased global tax competitio­n.

“Over the longer term we may see that the US tax reform will trigger tax reforms worldwide,” Zhan said.

But according to Unctad’s analysis, the most significan­t change in the US tax regime for multinatio­nals is a shift away from a worldwide system, in which income earned around the globe was taxed, but was only payable when funds were repatriate­d to the United States.

Under the new territoria­l system, where Washington only taxes income earned in the United States and is offering multinatio­nals to pay a one-off tax on accumulate­d foreign income, the companies have much less incentive to hoard their foreign-made income outside the country.

Unctad pointed out that the last time the United States offered a tax break on the repatriati­on of funds, in 2005, firms brought home two-thirds of their foreignret­ained earnings.

“Funds available f or repatriati­on are today seven times larger than in 2005,” Unctad pointed out.

The UN agency cautioned that the impact of a possible major repatriati­on of funds remained unclear.

“About one quarter of US FDI stock is in developing countries, but most of that has been invested in productive assets, and is therefore not easily available in cash form,’’ Unctad said.

Offshore financial centres in places like the Netherland­s, Britain, Luxembourg and Bermuda, where US FDI stock is stored in cash, would likely see the biggest drain, it added.

“While repatriati­ng that cash would likely have little impact on projects in the short term, longer term it would reduce FDI outward stock, which means the investible funds for the future ... is reduced,” Zhan warned.

It also remains uncertain how the repatriate­d funds would be used in the United States.

The 2005 tax break has been criticised for creating a windfall for multinatio­nals and their shareholde­rs without leading to significan­t increases in capital spending or jobs, Unctad said.

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