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Countries Agree Global Minimum Corporate Tax Rate
Editorial Staff
11 October 2021
A total of 136 countries have agreed to set a global minimum corporate tax rate of 15 per cent – requiring some nations such as Ireland to increase their low rates. With many high net worth individuals owning operating companies - some of which carry out cross-border business - the tax changes could affect wealth managers' clients. The OECD said the deal covered nations representing more than 90 per cent of global GDP. The organization said the deal will “reallocate more than $125 billion of profits from around 100 of the world’s largest and most profitable MNEs to countries worldwide.”
The push for a global minimum has been led by US President Joe Biden, who is bidding to raise the US corporate tax rate from its current 21 per cent rate to as much as 28 per cent, although Democrat lawmakers in Capitol Hill may trim that rise somewhat.
Biden, along with some other nations, has complained that multinationals use low-tax jurisdictions to book their profits and avoid paying higher rates in the countries where they do most of their business. Defenders of such an approach say competition between different countries’ tax rates is healthy and puts governments under pressure to keep taxes low. They have also dubbed the idea of a global minimum tax as a tax “cartel” and ultimately harmful, as other cartels tend to be. On the other side, organisations calling for such a minimum say companies aren't paying taxes where they often do the bulk of their business, and are avoiding paying a fair burden.
Announced by the Paris-based Organisation of Economic Co-Operation and Development, the agreement said that multinational enterprises must pay a tax rate of at least 15 per cent from 2023.
With Estonia, Hungary and Ireland having joined the agreement, it is now supported by all OECD and G20 countries. Four countries - Kenya, Nigeria, Pakistan and Sri Lanka - have not yet joined the agreement, the OECD said.
The OECD denied that the deal was about ending tax competition, arguing that it merely “puts multilaterally agreed limitations on it.”
“Today’s agreement will make our international tax arrangements fairer and work better,” OECD Secretary-General Mathias Cormann, said.
The affected countries aim to sign a multilateral convention during 2022, with effective implementation in 2023, the OECD said.