Posted on
OECD Tax Chief Outlines Next Steps for Global Tax Reform Deal
The OECD aims to complete a multilateral convention and model legislation by the end of 2021 or early 2022 so countries can start implementing new rules under a two-pillar global tax reform deal in 2023. During a July 16 OECD podcast, Pascal Saint-Amans, director of the OECD's Centre for Tax Policy and Administration, discussed translating the political agreement that more than 130 countries struck in recentweeks into concrete implementation. "The next step is finalizing the political deal in October. There is not much to do, just a few numbers to firm up," Saint-Amans said. "The following stepwill be the implementation to move from a political agreement to legislation."
Posted on
Amount A Plan Is a Formulary Approach Test, OECD Official Says
A key part of a G-20-backed tax reform planwill be a test ofwhether a formulary approach can be used morewidelywhen it comes to multinational profit allocation, a top OECD official said. Grace Perez-Navarro, the OECD's deputy tax chief, highlighted elements of a two-pillar global tax overhaul plan that more than 130 countries had agreed on and G-20 finance ministers recently approved. "This major achievement has been a long time coming," she said July 13 during awebcast organized by the Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center.
Posted on
Developing Countries Need Political Presence at OECD Tax Talks
Developing countries must mobilize political power to ensure fair representation in the OECD inclusive framework on base erosion and profit shifting, according to Loganwort, executive director of the African Tax Administration Forum. During a July 9 Tax Justice Network virtual conference, panelists representing the interests of developing countries said they felt that those countrieswere sidelined during OECD negotiations on a two-pillar solution to modernize global corporate tax rules because of a lack of political representation. At a June 30 meeting, 130 of the 139 countries in the OECD inclusive framework on BEPS released a statement agreeing to a two-pillar plan thatwould revise profit allocation rules and tentatively set a global minimum corporate tax rate of 15 percent.
Posted on
Pillar 1 of Global Tax Deal on a Slower U.S. Track, Yellen Says
The U.S. governmentwill decidewhat's necessary to push new profit allocation rules through the Senate as part of a G-20-backed global tax reform deal once an implementation plan is finalized, perhaps in early 2022. U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen confirmed July 11 that Treasury is pushing to include measures to implement pillar 2,which calls for global minimum taxation, of the two-pillar plan in a forthcoming budget resolution and reconciliation package. Shewas speaking during a press conference the day after G-20 finance ministers and central bank governors concluded their July 9-10 meeting in Venice, Italy, under the Italian presidency,where ministers endorsed the plan.
Posted on
Amazon Announces New Ad Fees in Countries With DSTs
Amazon has notified advertisers that itwill soon apply new fees to their invoices if their ads are served in six countrieswith digital services taxes, including the United Kingdom and France. The company confirmed the change in a July 16 email to Amazon Advertising clients, saying that new "regulatory advertising fees"would start applying September 1. According to a company help page, the new feeswill be included on invoices "when an ad is served in and/orwhen ads are purchased by advertisers in certain countries."
Posted on
European Parliament Members Push Back Against Digital Levy Delay
Prominent members of the European Parliament have asked the European Commission not to postpone its digital tax proposal. The commission said on July 12 that it had put on hold itswork on a digital levy proposal in order not to impede the OECD-led negotiations on global tax reforms. The movewaswelcomed by the OECD but criticized by the EP,which had obtained in November 2020 a commitment from the commission to propose a digital levy by June 2021. The commitment, crystallized in an interinstitutional agreement, aimed to secure the reimbursement of the EU's ÔøΩ750 billion coronavirus recovery plan.
Posted on
EU Digital Levy Delay Is Welcome News, OECD Deputy Chief Says
The European Commission's decision to postpone its digital levy proposal is a positive development andwill allow countries to finalize the details of a two-pillar global tax reform agreement, according to a top OECD official. "In the end, everyonewill have to play his or her part in the sense that no countrywill do something thatwill be inconsistentwith this global dealwhen it's done," OECD Deputy Secretary-General Masamichi Kono said July 14 during awebcast organized by the Atlantic Council Geoeconomics Center.
Posted on
US Treasury secretary charms EU officials in Brussels
U.S. economy chief Janet Yellen had successfully stalled EU plans for a digital levy and told national governments how to run their economies. Yet EU officials had nothing but effusive praise for their American visitor. "We could say that in terms of our relationshipswith the U.S.we have gone from awinter of discontent to a summer of cooperation," Economy Commissioner Paolo Gentiloni told journalists. The European Commission confirmed itwould bow to U.S. demands to put its plans on hold until the fall.
Posted on
International Tax Law and its Influence on National Tax Systems
In this paper it is controversially suggested that international tax law is broader than the traditional view of most academics. In addition to domestic laws that cover cross-border transactions and double taxation agreements (or their multilateral counterparts) there is a special consensus international tax law (CITL) based on the institutions, instruments and interpretation implemented by international consensus. This paper exploreswhat is meant by international tax law. Theweight of opinion does not support the view that CIL presently creates any binding tax obligations on States. This paper proposes that there is, however, an emerging system based on common understandings,with the legal duties of cooperation and underpinning expectations of implementationwhich should be recognized as creating obligations upon States even though it does not constitute CIL.
Posted on
Global Tax Deal Marks Big Advance for Cooperation, but Tougher Tasks Lie Ahead
Finance chiefs from the Group of 20 leading economies endorsed an overhaul of the rules for taxing international companies, a landmark achievement of global cooperation after years of tensions. G-20 members have rarely been able to agree to such ambitious changes over the past decade of disputes over trade, investment and jobs, although they didwork together to offset the economic impact of the Covid-19 pandemic. The tax agreement, negotiated earlier this month by 130 countries, has raised hopes that major economies can find common approaches to tackling other global problems, such as climate change and trade.
Posted on
G-20 finance ministers back global tax overhaul
Finance officials in the Group of 20 (G-20) endorsed "key components" of a framework for an international tax overhaul that is a top priority of the Biden administration. The G-20 finance ministers and central bank governors announced their backing of major elements of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development's (OECD) tax framework following a meeting in Venice, Italy. The framework calls for a global minimum tax for corporations of at least 15 percent.
Posted on
EU Delays Push for Digital Levy to Focus on Global Tax Deal (4)
The European Union said that itwould postpone its push for a controversial digital levy to focus on a negotiation over a broader minimum global tax deal struck by theworld's largest economies. The U.S. has lobbied against the levy on digital sales thatwas likely to hit Silicon Valley giants' business in Europe. The EU had pledged to introduce a levy if therewas no progress on a sweeping effort to tax corporations more uniformly. Such a pact now seems more likely after the Group of 20 endorsed the principles of a global-tax agreement.
Posted on
Yellen to Press Europe on Digital Tax Plan Following G-20 Accord
U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellenwill press European Union officials in Brussels to reconsider their plan to propose a digital levy after securing the Group of Twenty's endorsement for the principles of a global corporate-tax agreement. Yellen is in Brussels following the gathering of G-20 finance ministers and central bankers in Venice,which concludedwith the group's call to finishwork on the global plan's details by October.
Posted on
Big Countries Using Tax Talks to Get More Revenue, Varadkar Says
Bigger countries are using negotiations on global corporation tax reform to increase their own tax revenue at the expense of smaller nations, Ireland's deputy prime minister said. "This isn't just about tax justice and big companies paying their fair share," Leo Varadkar told reporters in Dublin. "This is also about big countries trying to get a bigger share of the pie."
Posted on
Pillar Ones Reallocation of Taxing Rights: Has Anyone Consulted the U.S. Trade Representative?
On July 1, 2021, the OECD-led Inclusive Framework on BEPS announced that 130 countries had agreed on revised outlines of a two-pillar plan calling in part for a reallocation of taxing rights regarding certain large multinational businesses. The author discusses the proposed reallocation in light of the U.S. Trade Representative's recent reports on digital services taxes.
Posted on
Label Global Tax Rate Rebels as Harmful, EU Lawmakers Urge (2)
An influential EU panel has suggested using a mechanism designed to combat harmful tax practices to push EU member states into accepting a global minimum tax rate. Over 130 countries have agreed on a global minimum tax rate of "at least 15%" but four EU countriesÔøΩCyprus, Estonia, Hungary, and IrelandÔøΩhave not signed up to the agreement,whichwas negotiated through the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.
Posted on
Global Tax Deal Heads Down Perilous Path in Congress
A complex international corporate tax deal that took years to hammer out soon faces one of its toughest tests: the U.S. Congress.The Group of 20 major economies backed the plan in Venice, Italy, following the earlier endorsement from a broader 130-country group. The plan, aimed at limiting corporate tax avoidance,would revamp longstanding international rules and is crucial to President Biden's plans to raise corporate taxes."Theworld is ready to end the global race to the bottom on corporate taxation, and there's broad consensus about how to do it," Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said.
Posted on
Global Minimum Tax Deal Marked a Win for Yellen. Now She Must Sell It to Congress.
When the U.S. secured international backing for a global minimum corporate tax, it marked an early victory for Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen as the country's top financial diplomat and paved theway for a key plank of President Biden's domestic agenda. People involved in the negotiations credit Ms. Yellenwith reviving yearslong talks to clamp down on tax avoidance by multinational firms. The breakthrough potentially set the stage for the most sweeping change in international taxation in a century.
Posted on
EU and U.S. to Discuss Digital Tax Ahead of Blocs Levy Plan (1)
The European Union's digital chiefwill meet U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen as the EU delayed plans for a digital levy after a potential global tax breakthrough. Margrethe Vestager, the EU's executive vice-president for digital issues, is now due to propose a new EU tax on technology companies' revenues on July 20, aweek later than planned, according to a document seen by Bloomberg News.
Posted on
U.S. Trade Chief Asks Canada to Abandon Proposed Digital Tax
In a meetingwith Mary Ng, Canada's trade minister, U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai urged Canada to abandon its proposed unilateral digital-service tax.
Posted on
Global Tax Deal Will Survive Europe Digital-Tax Plan, OECD Says
The European Union's plan to propose a new digital-services tax is unlikely to undermine global talks aimed at eliminating such levies, according to the head of the international group spearheading the discussions. "I know for a fact that the European Union is very conscious of the importance of this deal on international tax reform," Mathias Cormann, secretary-general of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, said in a Bloomberg Television interview.
Posted on
France Sees Tax Deal Near, Pushes for Minimum Rate Above 15%
William Horobin and Maria Tadeo
French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said he is confident the Group of 20 economieswill back a deal on international tax, even as his country pushes for a higher minimum corporate rate. The G-20 meeting in Venice is poised to give its backing to a deal signed by 131 countries for a minimum corporate levy of "at least 15%," and new rules for dividing up the tax revenues from theworld's largest companies -- particularly U.S. tech giants.
Posted on
Spains Calvino: Confident There Will Be A Deal on Digital Tax
"I hope and look forward to Ireland joining this consensus sowe can have a fairer system," Spanish Economy Minister Nadia Calvino says in interview during G20 in Venice, Italy.
Posted on
G-20 Finance Chiefs Vow to Overcome Tax Deal Hurdles by October
Top officials from the U.S., Germany and France each expressed confidence that a proposed global tax deal can overcome political obstacles inwashington andwithin the European Union in time for it to be finalized in October. "There's morework to be done, but I'm really hopeful thatwith the growing consensuswe're on a path to a tax regime thatwill be fair for all of our citizens," U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen told reporters on the sidelines of a Group of 20 meeting of finance ministers and central bankers in Venice.
Posted on
Global Tax Overhaul Gains Steam as G20 Backs New Levies
Global leaders on Saturday agreed to move aheadwithwhatwould be the most significant overhaul of the international tax system in decades,with finance ministers from theworld's 20 largest economies backing a proposal thatwould crack down on tax havens and impose new levies on large, profitable multinational companies.
Posted on
Ireland Fights for Its Tax Breaks
Ireland stands to lose up to a quarter of its corporate tax haul, and at the G20 meeting itwill push for terms thatwould allow it and other small countries to make up for the loss.
Posted on
G20 ratchets up pressure on global corporate tax deal holdouts
Theworld's largest economieswill thisweekend pile pressure on to holdout nationswhich are refusing to sign up to a global tax reform deal thatwould impose a minimum levy on multinational corporations.
Posted on
Brussels set to delay digital levy plan after G20 backs tax deal
Brussels is set to delay plans for its controversial digital levy until the autumn in an effort to boost the prospects of a global corporate tax reform deal.
Posted on
G20 ministers endorse carbon pricing to help tackle climate change
G20 finance ministers have collectively endorsed carbon pricing for the first time, describing the once contentious idea as one of "awide set of tools" to tackle climate change.
Posted on
Brady Skeptical of Global Tax Deal Amid EU Digital Levy Push
The top House Republican taxwriter remains unconvinced that a global tax reform deal reachedwithin the OECD frameworkwill roll back digital services taxes, especially because the EU plans on introducing a digital levy anyway.
Posted on
Crapo and Brady Urge Yellen to Push for Immediate End to DSTs
Congresswon't support an OECD tax reform deal unless it protects the U.S. economy, including through the instant repeal of digital services taxes, top Republican taxwriterswarned Treasury ahead of a key G-20 meeting.
Posted on
European Countries With DSTs Linked to Weaker Trade Competitiveness
The five major pre-Brexit EU countrieswith digital services taxes have seen their trade competitiveness in digital services plummet over the years,which could explainwhy they decided to adopt those taxes, economists said.
Posted on
Is There Room for Compromise on GILTI?
Mindy Herzfeld looks at options for adjusting the much-maligned global intangible low-taxed income regime to further President Biden's plan to use corporate tax policy to improve fairness and equity in U.S. society.
Posted on
EU Opens Consultation on Debt-Equity Bias in Corporate Taxation
The European Commission has launched a public consultation on a proposal for a directive thatwould mitigate tax-induced debt-equity bias by offering a tax allowance for companies that pursue equity financing.
Posted on
France Vows to Address U.S. Concerns Over Digital Levy
French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said July 6 that the EU's digital levy proposal is not "directed against the United States,"which fears that an EU tax could threaten progress at the OECD level.
Posted on
U.S. Reconciliation Bill May Have Global Minimum Tax Provisions
Treasury is in talkswith Congress's top Democratic taxwriters about including global minimum tax provisions in a partisan reconciliation package thatwould align the United States' domestic prioritieswith its OECD inclusive framework goals.
Posted on
G-20 Finance Ministers Greenlight Global Tax Reform Deal
The finance ministers of theworld's twenty largest economies have reached political agreement on a two-pillar global tax reform plan, calling on a small group of holdout countries to join in on the deal.
Posted on
Whats In a Name? EU Digital Levy Isnt a Tax, Vestager Says
Shakespeare said a rose by any other namewould smell as sweet, but multinational companies aren't likely to draw the same conclusion about a claim that the EU's proposed digital levy is not a tax.
Posted on
Decoding the global tax deal
Theworld's largest economies agreed Thursday to sweeping changes to the global tax system. They still have a lot ofwork to do on how to make that agreementwork in practice, and itwon't be operational until at least 2023.
Posted on
U.S. Proposal for 15% Global Minimum Tax Wins Support From 130 Countries
An effort to push the most sweeping changes to the global tax system in a century gained significant momentum on Thursdaywhen 130 nations agreed to a blueprint inwhich multinational corporationswould pay an appropriate share of taxwherever they operate.
Posted on
Financial services sector set for carve-out from new global tax rules
UK due to secure exemption for City of London banks from regulations brokered at OECD.
Posted on
Global tax deal faces challenges of detail, implementation and holdouts
Historic agreement by 130 countrieswill introduce minimum rate and new jurisdictional powers.
Posted on
Worlds leading economies agree global minimum corporate
Theworld's leading economies have signed up to a plan to force multinational companies to pay a global minimum corporate tax rate of at least 15 per cent following intense negotiations in Paris at the OECD.
Posted on
The good, the bad and the ugly of the global tax reform deal
The agreement reached by 130 countries has left fertile ground for new and clever techniques to circumvent the rules.
Posted on
Bidens Global Tax Competition
Benjamin M.willis argues that the Biden administration need not engage in the race to the bottom to ensure America's corporations remain the most competitive in theworld.
Posted on
SHIELD and GLOBE Treaty Issues
In news analysis, Lee A. Sheppard examines the treaty issues raised by the SHIELD and GLOBE minimum tax proposals from the Biden administration and the OECD.
Posted on
France Could Bring in $900 Million Under Pillar 1 Tax Reforms
France stands to raise ÔøΩ900 million annually under pillar 1 of a two-pillar global tax reform plan that countries are discussing through the OECD framework, taking into account Amazon's profitable cloud segment, new research shows.
Posted on
The Global Tax Plan: Questions and Answers
In awin for the U.S., governments from 130 countries have agreed to rewrite the rules for how countries tax corporate income. That is a big step forward for a complex project that has been years in the making andwould take years to implement. Here are some questions and answers about the deal.
Posted on
Ireland Could Derail Global Tax Reform
A new corporate tax agreement between 130 nations is quite an achievement, but the deal is far from done. The continued resistance of Ireland in particular could scuttle the accord. 130 countries agreed to an overhaul of global corporate tax rules involving a minimum rate of 15% and changes towhere companieswill pay some of their taxes. The processwas started by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development in 2013 and progress has been fitful. Holdouts from the deal include Hungary, Estonia, Nigeria, Kenya, Peru and Sri Lanka, aswell as Ireland.
Posted on
Big Tech Says Global Tax Deal Is a Win
Big tech companies said Thursday's breakthrough in negotiations over a global tax overhaulwas a step toward avoiding a patchwork of overlapping national taxes, but executives and trade bodies said they still need to see those tax regimes disappear before calling the deal awin. The U.S. secured international backing for a global minimum rate of tax as part of awider overhaul of the rules for taxing international companies. Officials from 130 countries that met virtually agreed to the broad outlines of the overhaul. Itwould be the most sweeping change in international taxation in a century.