Santa Fe New Mexican

Global corporate minimum tax deal agreed

- By David McHugh and Danica Kirka

FRANKFURT, Germany — More than 130 countries have agreed on changes to how big global companies are taxed, including a 15 percent minimum corporate rate designed to deter multinatio­nals from stashing profits in low-tax countries.

The deal announced Friday is an attempt to address the ways globalizat­ion and digitaliza­tion have changed the world economy. It would allow countries to tax some of the earnings of companies located elsewhere that make money through online retailing, web advertisin­g and other activities.

The agreement among 136 countries representi­ng 90 percent of the global economy was announced by the Paris-based Organizati­on for Cooperatio­n and Economic Developmen­t, which hosted the talks that led to it. The OECD said that the minimum tax would reap some $150 billion for government­s.

“Today’s agreement represents a once-in-a-generation accomplish­ment for economic diplomacy,” U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said in a statement. She said it would end a “race to the bottom” in which countries outbid each other with lower tax rates. “Rather than competing on our ability to offer low corporate rates,” she said, “America will now compete on the skills of our workers and our capacity to innovate, which is a race we can win.”

The deal faces several hurdles before it can take effect. U.S. approval of related tax legislatio­n proposed by President Joe Biden will be key, especially since the U.S. is home to many of the biggest multinatio­nal companies. A rejection by Congress would cast uncertaint­y over the entire project.

The big U.S. tech companies like Google and Amazon have supported the OECD negotiatio­ns. One reason is that countries would agree to withdraw individual digital services taxes they have imposed on them in return for the right to tax a part of their earnings under the global scheme.

That means the companies would deal with just the one internatio­nal tax regime, not a multitude of different ones depending on the country.

On Thursday, Ireland announced that it would join the agreement, ditching a low-tax policy that has led companies like Google and Facebook to base their European operations there.

Although the Irish agreement was a step forward for the deal, developing countries have raised objections and Nigeria, Kenya, Pakistan and Sri Lanka have indicated they will not sign up.

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