Bangkok Post

Global deal to end tax havens moves ahead

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>>PARIS: The world’s most powerful nations have agreed to a sweeping overhaul of internatio­nal tax rules, with officials backing a 15% global minimum tax and other changes aimed at cracking down on tax havens that have drained countries of much-needed revenue.

The Organisati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t, which has been leading the negotiatio­ns, said the new minimum tax rate would apply to companies with annual revenue of more than 750 million euros (US$866 million) and would generate around $150 billion in additional global tax revenue per year.

“Today’s agreement will make our internatio­nal tax arrangemen­ts fairer and work better,” OECD Secretary-General Mathias Cormann said. “We must now work swiftly and diligently to ensure the effective implementa­tion of this major reform.”

The agreement is the culminatio­n of years of fraught negotiatio­ns that were revived this year after President Joe Biden took office and renewed the United States’ commitment to multilater­alism. Finance ministers have been racing to finalise the agreement, which they hope will reverse a decades-long race to the bottom of corporate tax rates that have encouraged companies to shift profits to low-tax jurisdicti­ons, depriving nations of money they need to build new infrastruc­ture and combat global health crises.

On Friday, Hungary joined two other important holdouts, Ireland and Estonia, in agreeing to the plan. Kenya, Nigeria, Pakistan and Sri Lanka did not sign on to the agreement.

The US, which proposed the 15% minimum corporate tax rate, has long looked for ways to minimise incentives for companies to shift profits abroad to lower their tax bills. As the Biden administra­tion prepares to try to raise corporate rates in the United States, getting a global minimum tax in place has become critical to prevent companies from simply moving their headquarte­rs overseas.

Republican­s, who have opposed Biden’s domestic tax agenda, objected to the global deal and threatened to block it in Congress, suggesting a looming fight.

The deal goes beyond setting a global rate — it also creates new rules for the digital era. Technology giants like Amazon, Facebook and other big global businesses will be required to pay taxes in countries where their goods or services are sold, even if they have no physical presence there.

The separate tax aimed at the tech giants will reallocate over $125 billion of profits from the home countries of the 100 most profitable firms in the world to the markets where they operate.

 ?? ?? EXPOSED: People protest against Brazilian Economy Minister Paulo Guedes in Brasilia on Thursday after he was cited in the ‘Pandora Papers’ media probe.
EXPOSED: People protest against Brazilian Economy Minister Paulo Guedes in Brasilia on Thursday after he was cited in the ‘Pandora Papers’ media probe.

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