A Global Tax Cartel Is Floundering. Good.
Just as you don't attract bees with vinegar, you don't attract corporations by promising to tax them heavily.

Implementing a global tax cartel is hard. This lesson is being learned by the bureaucrats who dreamt up an effort to prevent businesses from taking advantage of the fact that some countries impose lower taxes than do other countries. A year after 130 jurisdictions agreed in principle to institute a global minimum tax rate of 15 percent on corporate profits and make it harder for companies to shift their tax liabilities from higher- to lower-taxing countries, the early result is a delay and buyers' remorse.
The global tax agreement, overseen by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), has two main pillars. Pillar One is meant to allow governments to tax digital businesses that sell services in a country but have no physical presence there, and hence weren't previously taxed there. These companies, of course, are taxed in the country where they are based or where their intellectual property is located, which (not surprisingly) is often in jurisdictions with lower taxes. Just as you don't attract bees with vinegar, you don't attract corporations by promising to tax them heavily.
Unfortunately, high-tax nations are always starving for more revenue, and their leaders—frustrated by the tax competition that deprives them of tax receipts they consider to be theirs—see things differently.
Enter Pillar Two, which is the global 15 percent minimum tax on large companies. The idea here is simple: No matter where a company is located, it can't be taxed at a rate lower than the one specified in the agreement.
Thankfully, so far, the overhaul hasn't been implemented. According to a report in The Wall Street Journal, "Negotiators in the group of countries that signed up in October had hoped to finalize the rules for the Pillar One shifts in tax revenues this month but have now given themselves an additional year." The global minimum tax is facing some objections too. Neither the United States nor the EU have passed legislation to implement it. In Europe, the Hungarian government has vetoed the legislation, and in the U.S., the "Build Back Better" plan containing the minimum tax was killed when the legislation failed to get through Congress.
I'm not sorry. Global tax cartels are as bad as they sound. They are explicitly designed to enable governments that refuse to cut their profligate spending and create friendlier tax environments to get more revenue. They are bad news for tax competition and fiscal sustainability, and they make governments less accountable to taxpayers, businesses, and to workers who would like their productivity to be rewarded with higher wages rather than higher tax bills for their employers.
Moreover, the imposition of global minimum taxes is meant to raise effective tax rates, and in so doing reduces the investments, innovation, and economic growth that contribute to our living standards. The OECD proposal would be no different. As Daniel Bunn of the Tax Foundation points out, one version of the proposal "would have the largest increase in effective average tax rates for investment hubs." Those higher rates would reduce firms' future foreign investment, as well as domestic investments, with repercussions on employment and growth.
U.S. officials should know this, since we already have a minimum tax on American companies' foreign earnings. The poorly designed Global Intangible Low-Tax Income (GILTI) tax was implemented as part of the 2017 tax reform legislation and is already showing the negative impact such taxes can have.
As Dunn and Garett Watson explain, "[GILTI] often operates as a surtax on the foreign earnings of U.S. companies." A Biden administration proposal would worsen it and, according to Tax Foundation modeling, cause "the tax liability U.S. companies face on their foreign earnings [to] nearly triple over the next decade." It would also put American companies seeking new markets abroad at a competitive disadvantage. Yet, the Biden administration is not only doubling down on the GILTI tax, but also is eager to force a minimum tax on everyone.
Tax systems should inflict as little harm as possible while raising revenue. There is little hope of that here. An alternative to a global tax cartel would be for high-tax nations to get their fiscal houses in order, cut spending, and grow their economies with taxpayer-friendly, supply-side reforms. I won't hold my breath.
COPYRIGHT 2022 CREATORS.COM.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Sometimes I think even when we do get One World Government that maybe that won't bring about Utopia.
Sorry to be so negative guys, but I worry.
I actually have made $18k within a calendar month via working easy jobs from a laptop. As I had lost my last business, I was so upset and thank God I searched this simple job (vsg-05) achieving this I'm ready to achieve thousand of dollars just from my home. All of you can certainly join this best job and could collect extra money on-line visiting this site.
>>>>>>>>>> http://getjobs49.tk
No Utopia according to those people is always just one more tax and one more regulation away.
Brain Dead Biden was wrong to try to do it in the BBB bill. Should have just issued an EO like Trump to get the taxes levied he wanted.
But everyone in the world wanted BBB.
That's why all those leaders of a dozen plus countries used the exact same slogan at the exact same time...
But hey, sometimes a great notion got what he wanted.
No more Trump, and Biden giving preferential treatment to China.
Thanks for helping us all out there, guy.
Didn't vote for Biden or Trump and even if every 3rd party vote in my state went for Trump he'd still have lost; so nope didn't help either of them get elected.
And yeah I am an American who will never support a president that directly taxes. Call me old fashion, but a country founded on "No Taxation without Representation" should stick to that promise.
You bring up tariffs out of nowhere and completely ignore the myriad other regulations which are actually destroying our well being.
You're sure as hell campaigning for something, regardless of how you vote.
The No Agenda podcast had a super cut of BBB references going back years, too. Whether it’s just banal sloganeering or The Global Corporatist Plan, I dunno. But its somebody’s baby and it’s got legs.
https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/what-council-inclusive-capitalism
One of the most revealing quotes on the agenda comes from Clinton Administration Deputy Secretary of State Strobe Talbot, who stated in Time magazine that:
“In the next century, nations as we know it will be obsolete; all states will recognize a single, global authority… National sovereignty wasn’t such a great idea after all.”
He adds in the same article a lesser known quote:
“…The free world formed multilateral financial institutions that depend on member states’ willingness to give up a degree of sovereignty. The International Monetary Fund can virtually dictate fiscal policies, even including how much tax a government should levy on its citizens. The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade regulates how much duty a nation can charge on imports. These organizations can be seen as the protoministries of trade, finance and development for a united world.”
Gotta love when they just come right out and say it. WEF style.
These globalists should all be hanged.
Finally, a sensible solution is proposed. We're going to need a lot of rope...
Apparently Veronique hasn't heard of the WEF, ESG, or noticed what's going on with inflation, energy prices, and food production.
Finally, some good fucking news!
Fight it all you want, but being forcibly collectivized onto organic, wind-powered bug plantations is an idea who’s time has come.
Cartel is currently a disallowed form of business, tax or not tax. I am new to entrepreneurship and for me it is difficult to distinguish. So in order not to get misguided, I read about how to build a website like angie's list and perhaps I would run my startup from a small scale point, but with a higher potential. I really want to help people prosper.
I actually have made 18,000 Dollars within a calendar month via working easy jobs from a laptop. As I had lost my last business, I was so upset and thank God I searched this simple job achieving this I'm ready to achieve thousand of dollars just from my home. All of you can certainly join this best job and could collect extra
money on-line visiting this interface.> http://oldprofits.blogspot.com
GILTI = guilty? Hmm.....
Fucking looters.
The problem is that the income tax system is not there to raise revenues. It is there so that over 600 legislators and millions of bureaucrats can meddle in areas that they know nothing about, reward their buddies and encourage their own morals and values. If it was just to raise revenue to run the government, it could be written in 100 pages or so.
This entire idea does sound kind of fishy!