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US Secretary of the Treasury Janet Yellen attends a G7 finance leaders meeting in Italy on May 24. Photo: Reuters

Frustrated US says India, China hindering global corporate tax deal as deadline nears

  • Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said New Delhi and Beijing not showing interest in finalising Pillar 1 of the OECD pact reached in principle in 2021
  • The talks are aimed at reallocating the taxing right on US-based digital giants, allowing about US$200 billion of profits to be taxed in the countries where they do business

US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said on Friday she is trying to save a part of the global corporate tax deal focused on highly profitable multinational firms, but India is refusing to engage on issues important to US interests.

Yellen said on the sidelines of a G7 finance leaders meeting in Italy that China also has been “all but absent” in the negotiations to finalise “Pillar 1” of the OECD corporate tax deal reached in principle in 2021 that involves 140 countries.

“We are actively engaged in this negotiation,” to meet an end-June deadline for the deal, Yellen said. “We’re committed to doing everything we possibly can to make it work.”

Earlier on Friday, Italian Finance Minister Giancarlo Giorgetti told reporters that the Pillar 1 negotiations were set to fail, citing objections from the US, India and China.

The Pillar 1 negotiations are mainly aimed at reallocating the taxing right on US-based digital giants, allowing about US$200 billion of corporate profits to be taxed in the countries where the companies do business.

A second pillar of the tax deal, the 15 per cent global minimum tax on corporate profits is separately being implemented by many countries, but the US Congress has not ratified it.

Yellen said there are two “red line” issues for the US in the talks, related to transfer pricing and the “Amount B” system for simplifying the calculation of transfer pricing.

While most countries support the US position on these issues, “we have a problem with India. India will not engage with us,” she said.

A collapse of the Pillar 1 negotiations could prompt the return of digital services taxes in some countries and reignite potential trade tensions.

Before the 2021 initial deal, US trade authorities threatened 25 per cent tariffs on more than US$2 billion worth of imports from Italy, Austria, Britain, France, Spain and Turkey, from cosmetics to handbags. These were put on hold after the countries agreed to suspend their digital taxes while details of the arrangement were worked out.

Italy wants to negotiate an agreement with Washington that would stop these tariffs, which are temporarily frozen until June, while also keeping its levy in place, an Italian official said on Friday.

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