Speaking to Reuters after meeting with European
Union officials in Brussels, Yellen said it was prudent for the
Commission to wait for the final parameters of the OECD 'Pillar
1' deal to reallocate taxing rights for large multinationals
before proceeding with its own levy.
"I was pleased with their decision to delay introduction of
this," Yellen said in an interview. "We're in the middle of
trying to finalize an agreement. Countries have agreed to
repeal, with Pillar 1, existing measures, and to avoid
introducing future digital taxes that would be discriminatory."
On Monday, the European Commission confirmed that it would delay
its digital levy, eliminating a potential barrier to the broader
global tax deal. U.S. officials had said that the idea of a new
digital levy, proposed last year when tax negotiations looked
stalled, was inconsistent with the OECD deal.
Among other officials, Yellen met with Irish Finance Minister
Paschal Donohoe, one of the major holdouts from the tax
agreement and whose buy-in will be crucial for the EU to approve
the deal for a 15%-plus global minimum corporate tax.
"He's head of the Eurogroup of finance ministers, he invited me
to meet with them. Clearly he has a strong interest in the
success of the EU," Yellen said.
She declined to comment on her message to Donohoe and Ireland's
latest views on the OECD deal.
The world's 20 largest economies endorsed on Saturday a plan for
a global overhaul of corporate tax that would introduce a
minimum tax rate and change the way large companies like Amazon
and Google are taxed, based partly on where they sell their
products and services rather than on the location of their
headquarters.
The reform, if finalised in October, would need parliamentary
approval in the more than 130 countries that support it,
including the U.S. Congress where it could face opposition from
the Republicans. All EU member states must also approve tax
reforms, including the envisioned global deal.
(Reporting by David Lawder; Editing by Catherine Evans)
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