On October 8, 2021, President Joseph R. Biden, Jr. praised the announcement that day of the global tax agreement—the “Statement on a Two-Pillar Solution to Address the Tax Challenges Arising from the Digitalisation of the Economy”Footnote 1—as a demonstration of “how American leadership and diplomacy is advancing the economic interests of American working families.”Footnote 2 Its adoption, he continued, would “ensure that profitable corporations pay their fair share, and provide governments with the resources to invest in their workers and economies.”Footnote 3 Concluding the Two-Pillar Solution, a political agreement, among the now 141 members of the OECD/G20 Inclusive Framework on Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (IF), was an administration priority led by Secretary of the Treasury Janet Yellen.Footnote 4 The difficult task remains of incorporating it into law in each of the 137 jurisdictions (representing about 95 percent of global gross domestic product (GDP)) that have signed on.Footnote 5 The outcome is uncertain, as the Two-Pillar Solution established the “agreed components” of binding rules, not the rules themselves. Legislation has to be drafted and enacted at the national or (in the case of the European Union) regional level to effectuate certain parts of the agreement, and a treaty needs to be negotiated and ratified and existing treaties need to be amended to implement other parts. The Organisation of Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) has drafted and continues to draft many of the necessary technical legal texts (a multilateral convention, model treaty provisions, model rules, commentaries, and other documents). In the United States, Congress has yet to take up the necessary modifications to the tax code, and in the European Union, Hungary has blocked the unanimity required for the adoption of a Council directive enacting one part of the agreement.Footnote 6 Agreement at the international level has yet to turn into commitment at the domestic level.
A product of years of negotiation at the OECD, the Two-Pillar Solution focuses on two critical challenges in contemporary international tax and pairs them in a package deal: (1) the taxation of digital businesses that are physically located in one country but sell their services in another (Pillar One); and (2) the taxation of multinational enterprises that move their operations to low-tax jurisdictions (Pillar Two).Footnote 7
The first challenge arises because nearly all countries have adopted some forms of territorial taxation. Digital companies that operate globally, like Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google, do not have a traditional physical presence in most places where they sell their services, and they thus avoid territorial taxes on the incomes from a large portion of their sales. As the sales and profits of these companies have increased, countries where those services are purchased (“market jurisdictions”), including both developing and developed economies (France most prominently), imposed or threatened to impose digital services taxes, arguing that users in their countries play a role in value creation.Footnote 8 The United States, where many tech giants are located, pushed back against such taxes with threats of tariffs against countries that impose them.Footnote 9 This dynamic, which might have led to a trade war, created the impetus for an agreement that would transfer to market jurisdictions the taxing rights to a percentage of the profits of the largest multinational enterprises (MNEs) in exchange for the elimination of digital services taxation on those MNEs in those jurisdictions.
Pillar One of the Two-Pillar Solution does just that. It applies to the approximately one hundred MNEs (“[i]n-scope companies”)Footnote 10 “with global turnover above 20 billion euros and profitability [i.e., profits divided by turnover] above 10%.”Footnote 11 About half of these are U.S. companies.Footnote 12 The agreement requires that “25% of [the] residual profit [of these companies,] defined as profit in excess of 10% of revenue [‘routine profits,’] . . . be allocated to market jurisdictions [as a ‘taxing right’].”Footnote 13 This is called “Amount A.” A market jurisdiction qualifies for an Amount A taxing right allocation “when the in-scope MNE derives at least 1 million euros in revenue from that jurisdiction [or 250,000 euros from jurisdictions with GDPs of less than 40 billion euros].”Footnote 14 To take an example, if an MNE has €40 billion in sales and €10 billion in profit (and thus is an “in-scope company” since turnover is above €20 billion and profitability is 25 percent), its “routine profit” would be €4 billion (10 percent of €40 billion) and its “residual profit” would be €6 billion (the €10 billion profit less the €4 billion routine profit).Footnote 15 Amount A would therefore be €1.5 billion (25 percent of €6 billion), and that amount would potentially be taxed by the market jurisdictions in which the MNE derives at least €1 million in revenue. The deal requires the removal of digital services taxes and “other relevant similar measures” and the elimination of double taxation of profit allocated to market jurisdictions.Footnote 16 It will also provide MNEs with “mandatory and binding” dispute prevention and resolution mechanisms on “all issues related to Amount A.”Footnote 17 Pillar One will be given legal effect through a treaty and domestic law. The treaty is now scheduled for completion during the first half of 2023.Footnote 18 Once implemented, it is expected that the “taxing rights on more than USD 125 billion of profit [will be] reallocated to market jurisdictions each year.”Footnote 19 According to U.S. officials, “the revenue effect for the United States will be close to neutral—although the United States would relinquish tax entitlement owing to its status as the home country to many of the affected companies, it would also gain new entitlements to tax owing to its enormous consumer market.”Footnote 20
The second issue arises because companies can move their operations from jurisdiction to jurisdiction in search of lower tax rates. This has become easier and more consequential with the increasing value of intangible assets. Tax competition between countries ensues, as they seek to attract investment, reducing rates and hence government revenue. If a common floor for corporate tax rates were adopted, tax competition would likely be reduced, and greater tax revenue should result.
Pillar Two does that. It sets a minimum effective tax rate of 15 percent for MNEs, including their constituent entities, with €750 million in annual revenue. The rate is enforced through two rules (collectively, the Global anti-Base Erosion Rules (GloBE rules)).Footnote 21 First, if a covered MNE—including any constituent entity—pays less than 15 percent in a jurisdiction, then a top-up tax is imposed on that entity by that jurisdiction so that the effective rate equals 15 percent (the Income Inclusion Rule). Second, if a constituent entity of a covered MNE is located in a jurisdiction where the 15 percent rate is not imposed, the jurisdiction of its parent entity will collect any applicable top-up tax owed by the constituent as a backstop (the Undertaxed Payment Rule).Footnote 22 Pillar Two's GloBE rules are to be made operational through domestic law. The IF approved model rules on December 14, 2021, to assist states with their Pillar Two legislation.Footnote 23 If adopted, “the global minimum tax rate of 15% is estimated to generate around USD 150 billion in new tax revenues globally per year.”Footnote 24 Congress's Joint Committee on Taxation estimates that the United States would collect $23.187 billion dollars in revenue in fiscal year 2024 and $318.687 billion in the ten years ending in fiscal year 2032.Footnote 25
Assistant Secretary of Tax Policy Lily Batchelder explained the importance of the Two-Pillar Solution for the United States. Pillar One, she emphasized, seeks “to restabilize the [international tax] system in a manner that would be sustainable and will put an end to unilateral, discriminatory measures” like digital services taxes.Footnote 26 What is more, she noted, “[o]ur companies would also benefit from the increased tax certainty it will create. . . . They will be able to plan for the future and invest their capital based on economic and not tax considerations.”Footnote 27 Pillar Two, she stressed, reverses the trend of tax competition. It is important, she said, “that owners of capital bear their fair share of the tax burden . . . because it is fair, but also because it will help ensure that our political systems at home and abroad are stable and functioning. It will help ensure we all have the resources we need to make investments that expand opportunities.”Footnote 28 In testimony to the Senate Finance Committee, Secretary Yellen summarized the deal's advantages. The agreement, she said, “will stabilize our tax systems, provide resources to invest in security and respond to crises like COVID-19, and ensure corporations fairly share the burden of financing government.”Footnote 29 President Biden's proposed 2023 budget legislation sought to implement Pillar Two into U.S. law.Footnote 30 But opposition from Senate Republicans, who oppose increasing tax rates, and the reluctance of Senator Joe Manchin (D-WV) to move forward at this time, meant that the corporate tax reform that was enacted in August 2022 did not include rules that would align the tax code with the global minimum tax.Footnote 31
In the European Union, legislation has also faced hurdles. Unanimity is required to approve the proposed directive implementing Pillar Two, but Poland and Hungary balked at agreeing to the measure.Footnote 32 Eager to push the agreement forward, the EU and the United States sought to convince both states to reverse their opposition. Secretary Yellen visited Poland in mid-May, and on June 1 the EU offered Poland €35.4 billion in loans and grants in COVID-19 recovery aid, apparently as an inducement.Footnote 33 By the middle of June, Poland indicated that it was dropping its opposition.Footnote 34 Hungary, though, continues to dissent. On July 8, the United States notified Hungary that it is terminating the bilateral tax treaty between the two countries, reportedly because the “United States, across administrations, has had long-held concerns with Hungary's tax system and the Hungary treaty.”Footnote 35 Hungary is apparently working with congressional Republicans.Footnote 36 With Hungary's opposition to the directive firm at the moment, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, and Spain announced in September that they would push forward regardless, either through the EU's “enhanced cooperation” procedure (which requires nine member states) or by enacting domestic legislation country-by-country.Footnote 37 Draft legislation is pending in many countries outside of the EU, including Australia, Canada, New Zealand, South Korea, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom.