White House says G-7 leaders will endorse global tax plan

WASHINGTON • The Group of Seven (G-7) leaders meeting in Britain will endorse US President Joe Biden's proposal for a global minimum tax of at least 15 per cent on corporations, White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan has said.

The US Treasury in May proposed a global minimum corporate tax of at least 15 per cent to try to end a downward spiral of corporate tax rates.

"America is rallying the world to make big multinational corporations pay their fair share so we can invest in our middle-class at home," Mr Sullivan tweeted on Friday.

By supporting the move, major economies are aiming to discourage multinationals from shifting profits - and tax revenues - to low-tax countries regardless of where their sales are made.

Current global tax rules date back to the 1920s and struggle with multinational tech giants that sell services remotely and attribute much of their profits to intellectual property held in low-tax jurisdictions.

US tech giants such as Facebook and Amazon could benefit from the agreement to create a global minimum 15 per cent corporate tax rate if the final deal also scraps increasingly popular digital services taxes, according to industry lobbyists.

The decision had been expected after G-7 finance officials backed a tax rate of at least 15 per cent during a meeting on June 5.

The US Treasury has said the G-7's endorsement will provide momentum for advancing negotiations towards a broader G-20 finance meeting in July in Italy.

US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and her counterparts from Germany, Indonesia, Mexico and South Africa backed the move in a column published on Wednesday by the Washington Post.

They said they were confident that the global minimum tax rate could ultimately be pushed higher than 15 per cent, citing "the ambition of the discussions thus far".

REUTERS

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Sunday Times on June 13, 2021, with the headline White House says G-7 leaders will endorse global tax plan. Subscribe