Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Granholm spins comparison of tax proposal

Would US be ‘in line with’ other nations or at top?

- Louis Jacobson

Would President Joe Biden’s corporate tax rate proposal get the United States in tune with other major countries? Or would it make the U.S. the top corporate taxer among that group?

Democrats and Republican­s are at loggerhead­s on that question, as Biden proposed using a corporate tax hike as a way to pay for his infrastruc­ture plan.

Biden wants to raise the federal tax rate on corporatio­ns from 21% to 28%. That increase would leave the rate lower than the 35% it was before President Donald Trump signed a tax law in 2017.

Republican­s argue that an increase to 28% would leave the United States at a competitiv­e disadvanta­ge. Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia, a moderate Democrat whose support will be needed to pass any such bill, has already said he opposes any increase beyond 25%.

During an appearance on CNN’s “State of the Union,” Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm made the case for Biden’s 28% target.

“You recall that, just a few years ago, the tax rate for corporate taxes was 35%, and when Donald Trump passed his corporate and tax cuts for the wealthy package, he dropped it to a point that nobody was even asking for, which was 21%,” Granholm said during the April 4 interview.

“So, what Joe Biden is saying is, let’s put it to a reasonable middle. Let’s put us in line with other industrial nations, which is at 28%.”

We looked at whether Biden’s proposal would “put us in line with other industrial nations” on corporate taxation. The reality is that the new U.S. rate would be either the top rate or in the top one-fifth of rates, depending on which metric you use.

A look at the data

To make the most complete countyto-country comparison­s, experts generally look at a country’s national corporate tax rate plus a weighted average of tax rates for its sub-national units. (In the case of the U.S., that would be states that have corporate income tax rates.)

While the national rate under Biden’s plan would be 28%, experts have calculated that the national plus sub-national rate would average out to 32.34% under the proposal.

We looked at both measuremen­ts, using data compiled by the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t, or OECD, a group of 38 economical­ly advanced nations that is often used as a proxy for the “industrial nations” to which Granholm was referring.

Using the more expansive tax rate — national plus sub-national corporate taxation — enactment of Biden’s proposal would put the United States highest in the rankings of advanced nations for corporate taxation. The closest would be Portugal, with a 31.5% combined rate.

By this standard, Granholm is wrong. By comparison, the United States’ current 25.76% combined corporate tax rate ranks a little higher than the median for advanced countries.

Biden’s proposal “would put us at the top of the OECD, though only slightly above some of the other major economies,” said Eric Toder, the co-director of the Urban Institute-Brookings Institutio­n Tax Policy Center.

Taking an even more elite selection of world economies, the Group of Seven industrial nations, the proposed rate would also rank No. 1.

The United States’ 32.34% combined rate would exceed that of Germany (29.9%), Japan (29.74%), Italy (27.81%), Canada (26.47%), France (25.83%) and the United Kingdom (19%).

National rates only

Looking at the national rate by itself changes the equation somewhat, but the United States remains near the top of the OECD rankings.

Biden’s proposed 28% rate would be tied for seventh among the 38 nations, behind Australia (30%), France (32%), Colombia (32%), Costa Rica (30%), Mexico (30%), and Portugal (30%), and tied with New Zealand (28%).

In other words, the U.S. would rank in the top one-fifth of OECD nations.

By comparison, the United States’ current national corporate tax rate of 21% would be a better fit for the phrase “in line” with other industrial nations, as Granholm put it. The current 21% rate puts the United States broadly in the middle of the pack.

As for the G-7, the United States’ 28% national rate would rank second to France (32%) and ahead of Italy (24%), Japan (23.2%), United Kingdom (19%), Germany (15.8%) and Canada (15%).

Granholm’s office focused on the national rate, arguing that national policy is the only thing the administra­tion can control and said it considers being tied for seventh in the OECD to be roughly in line with other industrial­ized countries.

They added that, according to the Peter G. Peterson Foundation, the United States has the lowest share of its GDP stemming from corporate taxation of any of the G-7 countries.

That’s due in part to the United States’ current rate being the lowest of the G-7 countries except the United Kingdom.

Our ruling

Granholm said Biden’s corporate tax rate increase would “put us in line with other industrial nations.”

Using the most expansive measure, a combinatio­n of the national and subnationa­l rates, the United States after enactment of Biden’s proposal would actually rank the highest of any of the 38 countries in the OECD, which is often used as a proxy for leading industrial nations.

Using just the national rate, the U.S. would rank below Australia, France, Colombia, Costa Rica, Mexico and Portugal and would be tied with New Zealand (28%). But that would still be in the top one-fifth of advanced countries.

We rate the statement Mostly False.

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