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Tax avoidance: halting the race to the bottom
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Ireland out on a limb over corporation tax
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Ireland’s low-tax economy can survive OECD reform: experts Published on Share
Far-reaching global tax reforms are reaching fruition and on the face of it, Ireland has most to lose after the small European economy threw open its doors to US multinationals.
On Thursday, 130 countries endorsed an outline agreement by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), which groups 38 wealthy nations, to level up global corporation tax.
“Pillar one” would re-allocate tax jurisdiction from where multinationals are headquartered to where they make profits, while the second pillar would establish a global minimum rate of 15 percent.
The OECD says the deal will generate an estimated $150 billion in extra revenues globally, adapt the tax system to the modern digitalised economy and support state finances battered by the coronavirus crisis.
Ireland s low-tax economy can survive OECD reform: experts
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Ireland s low-tax economy can survive OECD reform: experts
Issued on:
03/07/2021 - 04:26 Ireland s low corporate tax rate has attracted multinational companies that want a base in the European Union Paul FAITH AFP/File 4 min
London (AFP)
Far-reaching global tax reforms are reaching fruition and on the face of it, Ireland has most to lose after the small European economy threw open its doors to US multinationals.
On Thursday, 130 countries endorsed an outline agreement by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), which groups 38 wealthy nations, to level up global corporation tax. Pillar one would re-allocate tax jurisdiction from where multinationals are headquartered to where they make profits, while the second pillar would establish a global minimum rate of 15 percent.