Qatar Tribune

China And India Join The Campaign For A Global Minimum Tax

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DONALD Trump’s global economic strategy was to rail against other nations for ripping us off while doing little to level the playing field. Indeed, the trade wars he started harmed American consumers and cost taxpayers billions in subsidies paid to US farmers.

Joe Biden looks upon American leadership differentl­y. His and Treasury Secretary Janet ellen’s so-far successful campaign to implement a global minimum 15 corporate tax is an early sign that there’s a far better way than Trumpian fits of pique.

We’ve been living with the problem for years: American corporatio­ns, which paid roughly one-third of federal revenues in the middle of last century, now pay just one-tenth of federal revenues. They dodge about 90 billion in taxes annually and hold 2 trillion in profits offshore. Meantime, corporatio­ns and wealthy individual­s are estimated to cheat government­s of 427 billion in taxes a year.

When, about a month ago, Biden and ellen debuted their push to build a firm tax oor below which corporatio­ns could not fall, naysayers asked what good it was to leave out China and India. The question has now been answered: The two giants were among 130 countries, representi­ng 90 of global DP, that last week okayed the concept as a means to tackle chronic tax avoidance by multinatio­nal firms.

An agreement in principle is not a final deal definition­s are notoriousl­y slippery. And even if every last nation purported to sign an ironclad agreement to prevent tax avoidance, it’s a certainty that many government­s will be unwilling or unable to resist the lure of providing breaks, incentives and direct investment­s that undermine the new regime.

But every step forward is one in which the wealthiest and most powerful economic interests on Earth come a bit closer to paying their share to government­s, which can then do their part to invest in helping the disadvanta­ged, and in which US policymake­rs can levy reasonable taxes on our richest conglomera­tes without worrying that they are engaging in an endless game of whack-a-mole. eep it up.

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