Marketdash

Treasury Chief Bessent Celebrates US Exit From Global Tax Deal Following Trump Negotiations

MarketDash Editorial Team
2 days ago
The United States secured an exemption from a global minimum corporate tax agreement, shielding American multinationals from a 15% levy that other countries will implement to curb profit-shifting practices.

The United States just pulled off what might be the most consequential tax exemption in recent history. In a deal finalized Monday by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, America's biggest multinationals won't be subject to the 15% global minimum tax that other countries are implementing.

How the Deal Went Down

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent isn't hiding his enthusiasm, calling this "a historic victory in preserving US sovereignty and protecting American workers and businesses from extraterritorial overreach." Meanwhile, OECD Secretary-General Mathias Cormann is diplomatically framing it as "a landmark decision in international tax cooperation," which is one way to describe a major concession to American negotiating power.

Here's the context: Back in 2021, over 130 countries agreed to establish a global minimum corporate tax rate of 15%. The whole point was to stop companies like Apple (AAPL) and Nike (NKE) from playing jurisdictional arbitrage, using creative accounting to shift profits to places like Bermuda and the Cayman Islands where tax rates hover near zero.

Trump Administration Pushes Back Hard

President Donald Trump made no secret of his disdain for the 2021 agreement brokered under the Biden administration. His position? The deal simply didn't apply to the United States. His team went further, warning other countries that attempting to tax American companies under this framework would trigger retaliatory measures.

The OECD finalized implementation guidance for the global minimum tax in 2023, projecting it would generate an additional $220 billion in income worldwide. That calculation now looks considerably different with the world's largest economy sitting on the sidelines.

The implications here stretch beyond just corporate tax rates. This exemption represents a significant shift in how international tax cooperation functions when one major player decides the rules don't quite work for them. Whether this strengthens or undermines the global tax architecture probably depends on which side of the negotiating table you're sitting on.

Treasury Chief Bessent Celebrates US Exit From Global Tax Deal Following Trump Negotiations

MarketDash Editorial Team
2 days ago
The United States secured an exemption from a global minimum corporate tax agreement, shielding American multinationals from a 15% levy that other countries will implement to curb profit-shifting practices.

The United States just pulled off what might be the most consequential tax exemption in recent history. In a deal finalized Monday by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, America's biggest multinationals won't be subject to the 15% global minimum tax that other countries are implementing.

How the Deal Went Down

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent isn't hiding his enthusiasm, calling this "a historic victory in preserving US sovereignty and protecting American workers and businesses from extraterritorial overreach." Meanwhile, OECD Secretary-General Mathias Cormann is diplomatically framing it as "a landmark decision in international tax cooperation," which is one way to describe a major concession to American negotiating power.

Here's the context: Back in 2021, over 130 countries agreed to establish a global minimum corporate tax rate of 15%. The whole point was to stop companies like Apple (AAPL) and Nike (NKE) from playing jurisdictional arbitrage, using creative accounting to shift profits to places like Bermuda and the Cayman Islands where tax rates hover near zero.

Trump Administration Pushes Back Hard

President Donald Trump made no secret of his disdain for the 2021 agreement brokered under the Biden administration. His position? The deal simply didn't apply to the United States. His team went further, warning other countries that attempting to tax American companies under this framework would trigger retaliatory measures.

The OECD finalized implementation guidance for the global minimum tax in 2023, projecting it would generate an additional $220 billion in income worldwide. That calculation now looks considerably different with the world's largest economy sitting on the sidelines.

The implications here stretch beyond just corporate tax rates. This exemption represents a significant shift in how international tax cooperation functions when one major player decides the rules don't quite work for them. Whether this strengthens or undermines the global tax architecture probably depends on which side of the negotiating table you're sitting on.