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						France seeks support for minimum corporate tax at world 
						level
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		 [January 24, 2019]   
		By Silvia Aloisi 
 DAVOS, Switzerland (Reuters) - France 
		called on Thursday for a new global system of taxation, including a tax 
		on digital giants, as governments look to prevent companies from 
		shopping around for tax havens.
 
 Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said the Group of Seven (G7), of which 
		France holds the rotating presidency, should consider setting a joint 
		minimum corporate tax and tackle the power of giant multinational 
		corporations.
 
 Le Maire said he had discussed the issue with his U.S. counterpart, 
		Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin. The tax would be aimed at eliminating 
		imbalances between the amount small and big companies pay.
 
 "There is a common understanding among all G7 members that we need a new 
		taxation system," he said at the World Economic Forum in the Swiss ski 
		resort of Davos.
 
		 
		This new global system, he said, should include a tax on digital 
		multinationals that France is pushing to introduce within the European 
		Union and then at the G7 level.
 "We will put on the table the idea of a fair taxation of Internet 
		giants," he told Reuters TV in an interview.
 
 However, EU finance ministers failed to agree a tax on digital revenues 
		in December, despite a last-minute Franco-German plan to salvage the 
		proposal by narrowing its focus to companies like Google <GOOGL.O> and 
		Facebook <FB.O>.
 
 
		
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			French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire leaves following the weekly 
			cabinet meeting at the Elysee Palace in Paris, France, December 19, 
			2018. REUTERS/Philippe Wojazer 
             
The EU's executive arm last year proposed a 3 percent tax on big digital firms’ 
online revenues, alleging the companies funneled profit through states with the 
lowest tax rates. 
But that proposal needs the backing of all 28 EU member states, including small, 
low-tax countries like Ireland which have benefited by allowing multinationals 
to book profits there on digital sales to customers elsewhere in the EU.
 Le Maire has since said a deal could be reached by the end of March. The French 
government has invested considerable political capital in the initiative, which 
is seen in Paris as a useful example of joint European action before EU 
parliament elections in May.
 
 Le Maire said France also wants the G7 - which also includes the United States, 
Japan, Germany, Britain, Italy and Canada - to introduce new rules forcing 
companies to report their highest and lowest wages to reduce the pay gap and 
help address social inequalities.
 
 (Reporting by Alessandra Galloni and Silvia Aloisi, editing by Mark Trevelyan)
 
				 
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