Sentinel & Enterprise

G-20 leaders endorse global tax accord

Nations to try to rein in multinatio­nal corporatio­ns

- By Christophe­r Condon

Leaders of the world’s biggest economies formally backed an ambitious plan to overhaul the way countries tax multinatio­nal companies in a bid to stem competitio­n for the lowest rates.

All of the leaders at a Group of 20 summit in Rome endorsed the new rules on Saturday, “including a global minimum tax that will end the damaging race to the bottom on corporate taxation,” U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said in a statement.

A senior U.S. administra­tion official, traveling with President Biden, earlier called the plan a historic reshaping of the rules for the global economy that will force corporatio­ns to pay their fair share of taxes. That echoed previous comments Yellen, whose support helped push forward a deal that

languished during the administra­tion of President Donald Trump.

The pact won support in principle from 136 government­s in October under the auspices of the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t. G-20 finance ministers endorsed a framework for the agreement in July.

The G-20’s endorsemen­t of the deal stands out at a summit that looks unlikely to produce any additional

substantia­l agreements. Leaders have failed to make serious progress on other prominent issues, including climate change and debt relief for low-income countries.

The tax pact has two sweeping objectives. It intends first to halt the effort by multinatio­nal companies to shift profits into low-tax havens through a new global minimum tax of 15% for multinatio­nal companies. It also at

tempts to address the increasing­ly digital nature of internatio­nal commerce by taxing companies, in part, on where they do business instead of where they book profits.

While the deal has overcome some major impediment­s — such as getting low-tax Ireland to sign on — it faces several potential snags before it comes into force and proves effective, including the creation of a credible dispute resolution mechanism.

Signatory countries must also follow through by enacting domestic legislatio­n to implement the new tax rules and by formally approving a multilater­al convention, to be drafted by the OECD.

The U.S. and five European government­s helped the agreement along with a side deal, announced Oct. 21. It allows the European countries to retain, for now, so-called digital services taxes on technology giants like Facebook Inc. and Amazon.com Inc., which U.S. officials said unfairly discrimina­ted against American companies. That allows those nations to maintain revenues and keeps the pressure on Congress to approve the new rules over objections from top Republican­s.

If and when a new global tax regime comes into force in the next two years, the European countries will offer a credit to effectivel­y refund any taxes collected in excess of what corporatio­ns would pay under the global tax deal.

Yellen said U.S. companies and workers, rather than competing on the ability to offer lower taxes, can now compete on the basis of skills, ideas and innovation, “which is a race we can win.”

Despite the Biden administra­tion’s hearty backing, the overall deal may still face its biggest challenge in the U.S., where it’s uncertain whether the president can convince enough lawmakers to approve the new reallocati­on of taxes.

While congressio­nal Democrats can enforce the 15% minimum tax on their own this fall as part of Biden’s proposed socialspen­ding package, enacting the tax-reallocati­on portion may take several more months and will face stiff opposition from Republican­s.

“The Biden administra­tion retreated by failing to demand immediate repeal of discrimina­tory taxes, which will continue for years, if not indefinite­ly,” Senator Michael Crapo of Idaho and Representa­tive Kevin Brady of Texas — the top two Republican­s on Congress’s tax-writing committees — said in a statement on Oct. 22. “The administra­tion simply settled for an empty promise — if we reform our tax laws to these countries’ satisfacti­on, then they will grant U.S. businesses tax credits against future taxes.”

 ?? JEFF J MITCHELL / POOL GETTY ?? British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, left, and French President Emmanuel Macron attend the G20 summit in Rome, Saturday. The two-day Group of 20 summit is the first in-person gathering of leaders of the world's biggest economies since the COVID-19 pandemic started.
JEFF J MITCHELL / POOL GETTY British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, left, and French President Emmanuel Macron attend the G20 summit in Rome, Saturday. The two-day Group of 20 summit is the first in-person gathering of leaders of the world's biggest economies since the COVID-19 pandemic started.

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