Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

G-20 backs plan for minimum tax

- associated press

A sweeping revision of internatio­nal taxation would seek to neutralize corporate tax havens.

Finance officials representi­ng most of the world’s strongest economies have backed a sweeping revision of internatio­nal taxation that includes a 15% global minimum corporate levy to deter big companies from resorting to low-rate tax havens.

Finance ministers from the Group of 20 countries endorsed the plan at a meeting Saturday in Venice.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet L. Yellen said the proposal would end a “self-defeating internatio­nal tax competitio­n” in which countries have for years lowered their rates to attract companies. She said that had been “a race that nobody has won. What it has done instead is to deprive us of the resources we need to invest in our people, our workforces, our infrastruc­ture.”

The next steps include more work on key details at the Paris-based Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t and then a final decision at the Group of 20 meeting of presidents and prime ministers on Oct. 30-31 in Rome. Italy hosted the finance ministers meeting in Venice because it holds the rotating chair of the G-20, whose members account for more than 80% of the world’s economic activity.

Implementa­tion, expected as early as 2023, would depend on action at the national level. Countries would enact the minimum tax requiremen­t into their own laws. Other parts could require a formal treaty. The draft proposal was approved July 1 in talks among more than 130 countries convened by the OECD.

The U.S. already has a minimum tax on overseas earnings, but President Biden has proposed roughly doubling the rate to 21%, which would exceed the proposed global minimum. Raising the rate is part of a broader proposal to fund Biden’s jobs and infrastruc­ture plan by raising the domestic corporate tax rate to 28% from 21%.

Yellen said she was “very optimistic” that Biden’s infrastruc­ture and tax legislatio­n “will include what we need for the United States to come into compliance” with the minimum tax proposal.

Republican­s in Congress have expressed opposition to the measure. Rep. Kevin Brady of Texas, the top Republican on the tax-writing Ways and Means Committee, has blasted the OECD deal, saying, “This is an economic surrender to China, Europe and the world that Congress will reject.”

The internatio­nal tax proposal aims to deter the world’s biggest firms from using accounting and legal schemes to shift their profits to countries where little or no tax is due — and where the company may do little or no actual business. Under the minimum, companies that escape taxes abroad would pay them at home. That would eliminate incentives for using tax havens or for setting them up.

From 2000 to 2018, U.S. companies booked half of all their foreign profits in seven low-tax jurisdicti­ons: Bermuda, the Cayman Islands, Ireland, Luxembourg, the Netherland­s, Singapore and Switzerlan­d.

A second part of the plan would allow countries to tax a portion of the earnings of companies that book profits without a physical presence, such as through online retailing or digital advertisin­g.

That part arose after France, followed by other countries, imposed a digital service tax on U.S. tech giants including Amazon and Google. The U.S. government regards those national taxes as unfair trade practices and is holding out the threat of retaliatio­n against those countries’ imports into the U.S. through higher import taxes.

Under the tax deal, those countries would have to drop or refrain from national taxes in favor of a global approach, in theory ending the trade disputes with the U.S.

U.S. tech companies would then face only the one-tax regime, instead of a multitude of different national digital taxes.

 ?? Luca Bruno Associated Press ?? ITALIAN police in riot gear clash with demonstrat­ors Saturday in Venice during a meeting of the Group of 20 finance ministers, who agreed on a plan to deter big companies from shifting profits to low-rate tax havens.
Luca Bruno Associated Press ITALIAN police in riot gear clash with demonstrat­ors Saturday in Venice during a meeting of the Group of 20 finance ministers, who agreed on a plan to deter big companies from shifting profits to low-rate tax havens.

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