Deputy US Treasury chief sees G7 support for 15%-plus global minimum tax

FILE PHOTO: Adewale Adeyemo confirmation hearing to be Deputy Secretary of the Treasury
Economist Adewale "Wally" Adeyemo listens to questions during his Senate Finance Committee nomination hearing to be Deputy Secretary of the Treasury in the Dirksen Senate Office Building, in Washington, DC, on Feb 23, 2021. (Photo: Greg Nash/Pool via REUTERS)

WASHINGTON: US Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo said he anticipates strong support from the G7 industrial democracies for the Biden Administration's proposed 15 per cent-plus global minimum corporate tax, which in turn should help solidify support in the US Congress for domestic corporate tax legislation.

"My sense is that you're going to see a lot of unified support amongst the G7 moving forward," Adeyemo told Reuters on Monday after supportive comments about the Treasury's proposal from France, Germany, Italy and Japan.

That support may be voiced at an in-person meeting of G7 finance ministers in London on Jun 4-5, Adeyemo said.

The reaction from G7 chair Britain has been more guarded.

The Treasury last week floated a global minimum rate of 15 per cent or higher, well below the Biden administration's 21 per cent minimum rate for US companies' overseas income and its 28 per cent proposed domestic corporate tax rate.

In 2017, the Trump administration and Republicans in Congress cut the rate to 21 per cent in 2017 and instituted a minimum tax rate on overseas income from intangible sources of 10.5 per cent.

The US global minimum tax proposal is expected to be a key topic of discussion at a preliminary virtual G7 finance leaders meeting on Friday.

"If we can get world to say that they’re willing to do at least 15 per cent, it gives us the ability to come back to the international conversation once we’ve finished to the domestic piece."

Negotiators in the OECD tax talks have been aiming for an agreement in principal this summer. By the time of a G20 finance leaders meeting in Venice, Italy in July, there should be a good sense of unity around a global minimum tax structure, Adeyemo said. He added that there would be a lot of technical details to work out, so a final agreement may have to wait until G20 leaders meet in Rome at the end of October.

Source: Reuters