The first would be to get a 15% minimum tax on corporations,
Biden proposes 15% corporate minimum tax, $1 trillion new infrastructure spending
U.S. President Joe Biden offered to scrap his proposed corporate tax hike during negotiations with Republicans, two sources familiar with the matter said on Thursday, in what would be a major concession by the Democratic president as he works to hammer out an infrastructure deal.
Biden offered to drop plans to hike corporate tax rates as high as 28%, and instead set a minimum tax rate that companies should pay instead at 15%, sources said. Biden’s new proposal, worth $1.7 trillion, would allow some $75 billion in unspent COVID-19 relief funds to be repurposed for the bill, one source said.
It assumes that increased tax revenues from stepped-up enforcement would raise $700 billion over a decade, drops subsidies on fossil fuels to raise additional funds, and would impose a new vehicle-miles-traveled fee on commercial trucks.
In return, Republicans would have to agree to at least $1 trillion in new infrastructure spending, one source said.
“He is personally leaning in, willing to compromise, spending time with senators – Democrat and Republican – to find out what is the art of the possible,” Commerce Secretary Gina Raimondo told CNN in an interview on Thursday.
“The only thing he won’t accept is inaction,” she said. “It has to be big and bold, $1 trillion or more.”
Biden originally proposed an infrastructure package that would cost $2.25 trillion, paid for by raising taxes on the United States’ wealthiest citizens and increasing taxes on corporations from 21% to 28%. (Reporting by Jarrett Renfrew and David Shephardson; Writing by Doina Chiacu and Heather Timmons; Editing by Susan Heavey and Jonathan Oatis)
A long article.
The 15% global corporate minimum tax gamble
“The time of tax planning has come to an end,” declared Pascal Saint-Amans, the OECD’s former tax chief, in
an interview with fDi in June.
He was reflecting on the landmark 15% global corporate minimum tax whose negotiations he spearheaded from 2013 to 2022, and which is now finally reaching fruition as countries are expected to start implementing it from the fiscal year starting on January 1, 2024.
More than 140 jurisdictions have signed up to the plan, which was first unveiled in 2021 and requires multinational enterprises (MNEs) with annual revenues of more than €750m to pay an effective tax rate (ETR) of at least 15% in each jurisdiction where they operate. This is the most significant international tax reform for MNEs in recent years, and arguably a rare success of multilateralism these days – provided it pans out as planned.
Will the OECD-championed fiscal reform level the playing field for global investment?
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