It appears that the international community is moving toward what many are calling a historic agreement to set a global minimum tax rate on multinational corporations (MNCs). It’s about time – but it may not be enough.
Under the existing rules, firms can escape
paying their fair share of taxes by booking their income in low-tax
jurisdictions. In some cases, if the law doesn’t permit them to pretend
that enough of their income originates in some tax haven, they have
moved some parts of their business to these jurisdictions.Apple became
the poster child of tax avoidance by booking profits made on its
European operations to Ireland, and then using another loophole to avoid
most of Ireland’s notorious 12.5% tax rate.
But Apple was hardly alone
in turning the ingenuity behind products we love toward avoidance of
taxes on the profits earned from selling them to us. They rightly
claimed that they were paying every dollar due; they were simply taking
full advantage of what the system offered them.From this perspective, an
agreement to establish a global minimum tax of at least 15% is a major
step forward. But the devil is in the details.
The current average
official rate is considerably higher. It is thus possible, even likely,
that the global minimum will become the maximum rate. An initiative that
began as an attempt to force multinationals to contribute their fair
share of taxes could yield very limited additional revenue, much lower
than the $240 billion underpaid annually. And some estimates suggest that developing countries and emerging markets would also see a small fraction of this revenue
.Preventing
this outcome depends not just on avoiding a downward global
convergence, but also on ensuring a broad and comprehensive definition
of corporate profits, such as one that limits deduction for expenses
relating to capital expenditures plus interest plus pre-entry losses
plus...
It would probably be best to agree on standard accounting so
that new tax-avoidance techniques do not replace the old ones.Particularly problematic in the proposals
advanced by the OECD is Pillar One, intended to address taxing rights,
and applying only to the very largest global firms. The old system of
transfer pricing was clearly not up to the challenges of
twenty-first-century globalization; multinationals had learned how to
manipulate the system to record profits in low-tax jurisdictions. That’s
why the United States has adopted an approach whereby profits are
allocated among the states by a formula that accounts for sales,
employment, and capital.
Developing and
developed countries may be affected differently depending on which
formula is used: an emphasis on sales will hurt developing countries
producing manufactured goods, but may help address some of the
inequities associated with the digital giants. And for Big Tech firms,
the value of sales must reflect the value of the data that they garner,
which is crucial to their business model. The same formula may not work
in all industries.
Still, the advances made in current proposals
have to be recognized, including moving away from the “physical
presence” test for imposing taxes – something that makes no sense in the
digital age.Some view Pillar One as a back-up to the minimum tax, and
are thus not concerned about the absence of economic principles guiding
its construction. Only a small fraction of profits
in excess of
a certain threshold are to be allocated – implying that the total share
of profits to be allocated is indeed small. But with firms permitted to
deduct all production inputs, including capital, the corporate income
tax is really a tax on rents or pure profits, and all of those pure
profits should be up for allocation. Thus, the demand by some developing
countries that a larger share of corporate profits be subject to
reallocation is more than reasonable.There are other troublesome aspects
of the proposals, as best as can be found out (there has been less
transparency, less public discussion of the details than one would have
expected). One concerns dispute resolution, which clearly can’t be
conducted using the kinds of arbitration now prevalent in investment
agreements; nor should it be left to a corporation’s “home” country
(especially with footloose corporations looking for favorable homes).
The right answer is a global tax court, with the transparency,
standards, and procedures expected of a twenty-first-century judicial
process.Another of the proposed reforms’ problematic features concerns
the prohibition of “unilateral measures,” seemingly intended to curb the
spread of digital taxes. But the proposed threshold of $20 billion
leaves many big MNCs outside the scope of Pillar One, and who knows what
loopholes smart tax lawyers will find? Given the risks to a country’s
tax base – and with international agreements so difficult to conclude
and MNCs so powerful – policymakers may need to resort to unilateral
measures.It makes no sense for countries to give up any of their taxing
rights for the limited and arbitrary Pillar One. The commitments asked
are incommensurate with the benefits given.The leaders of the
G20 will
do well to agree on a global minimum tax of at least 15%. Regardless of
the final rate that sets the floor for the 139 countries currently
negotiating this reform, it would be better if at least a few countries
introduced a higher rate, unilaterally or as a group. The US, for
example, is planning on a 21% rate.
It is crucial to
address the host of detailed issues required for a global tax agreement,
and it is especially important to engage with developing countries and
emerging markets, whose voice has not always been heard as clearly as it
should be.
Above all, it will be essential to revisit the issue in
five years, not seven, as currently proposed. If tax revenues do not
increase, as promised, and if the developing and emerging markets fail
to garner a greater share of those revenues, the minimum tax will have
to be raised and the formulae for allocating “tax rights” readjusted.
Project Syndicate
© Project Syndicate
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