Yes I understand that, but I believe that many corporations today pay even lower than a 15% effective tax rate. I suppose you're saying that these loopholes will be closed up to that minimum?
I think your choice of words here is confusing the issue a little, and would propose “incentive” for a tax break the government would like you to take (employing felons), and “loophole” for tax avoidance the government doesn’t want you to take (eg: sending all your profits to the Cayman Islands).
Given that, if min tax rate is 15% and standard corp tax is 20%, the government is happy for you to get to 15% and would like you to get to there with incentives, but not happy for you to get any lower however you do it. The incentives are generally not powerful enough to get you there anyway
Amazon has enjoyed an effective tax rate of 4.7% over the last 10 years by using tax breaks, tax credits, and depreciation, that have nothing to do with offshoring cash.
Depends what you mean by loop holes. In the US, you can deduct R&D or capital costs like building a factory. That can make your tax bill nearly zero. I wouldn’t call that a loop hope. It’s something out there to incentivize capital spending and job creation. Other countries have the same
Right, so the question is will those 'deductions' still be allowed or not? If so, then get ready for endless deductions from countries that want lower tax rates than 15%.
We can't know for sure until the text of the deal is published, but it is the likely scenario. plus, all the accountants and tax lawyers on the world will be unleashed upon this agreement to find ways to avoid paying up. So, this is my hope, but it is not certain.
peteretep|4 years ago
Given that, if min tax rate is 15% and standard corp tax is 20%, the government is happy for you to get to 15% and would like you to get to there with incentives, but not happy for you to get any lower however you do it. The incentives are generally not powerful enough to get you there anyway
bodono|4 years ago
https://smartasset.com/taxes/tax-loopholes
"The basic definition of a tax loophole is a provision in the tax code that allows taxpayers to reduce their tax liability."
And corporations readily exploit loopholes (or incentives if you prefer) to dramatically reduce their tax burden below 15%. See, eg, here:
https://itep.org/amazon-has-record-breaking-profits-in-2020-...
Amazon has enjoyed an effective tax rate of 4.7% over the last 10 years by using tax breaks, tax credits, and depreciation, that have nothing to do with offshoring cash.
nomoreplease|4 years ago
cheese_van|4 years ago
bodono|4 years ago
gostsamo|4 years ago