HomeNewsWorldExplained: What the international tax deal to subject MNCs to a minimum 15% tax is all about
Trending Topics

Explained: What the international tax deal to subject MNCs to a minimum 15% tax is all about

With more than 136 nations agreeing to OECD's historic global minimum tax deal accord, estimates suggest that around $150 billion will be generated in additional global tax revenues yearly. Here’s a look at what the new tax deal is all about.

October 09, 2021 / 19:38 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
PC-Shutterstock.
PC-Shutterstock.

A major tax reform agreed by 136 nations and tax jurisdictions on October 8 will ensure that large multinational corporations (MNCs) such Apple, Alphabet (Google) and Facebook pay taxes at a minimum rate of 15% and a fair share of it in countries where they earn their income. The agreement is commonly referred to as the global minimum tax deal. The accord is historic, as it is the first such agreement after the double tax avoidance convention adopted at the League of Nations almost a century ago.

Discussions to update international tax rules to make them more relevant in the digitalised world where large MNCs shifted large parts of their profits to low tax jurisdictions to reduce their tax outgo began several years ago. The COVID-19 pandemic and the urgency among nations to improve their tax revenues hastened the deal. Tax Justice Network had estimated that $420 billion of tax revenues is lost to tax havens annually.

Story continues below Advertisement

The tax agreement will come into effect in 2023, but before that domestic tax laws and rules will need to be updated to implement the deal. Here’s a look at what the new tax deal is about.

What was the need for a global minimum tax deal?