The
proposal, part of a two-pronged legislative strategy to curtail
tax avoidance by corporations and the wealthy, was put forward
by Senator Elizabeth Warren and Senate Finance Committee
Chairman Ron Wyden, both Democrats, along with Senator Angus
King, an independent who caucuses with the Democrats.
The corporate minimum tax targets public and privately owned
companies that post more than $1 billion in annual profits over
a three-year period.
The lawmakers said it would dovetail with the global corporate
minimum tax agreed by 136 countries
https://www.reuters.com/
business/finance/us-treasurys-yellen-confident-congress-will-pass-global-minimum-tax-2021-10-10,
which is aimed at corporations that pay little or no tax by
gaming the international tax system.
"What we have put together is built around the proposition that
corporations ought to pay their fair share and profitable
corporations should never pay zero tax," Wyden told reporters.
The corporate tax would apply to around 200 companies and raise
hundreds of billions of dollars over a decade, the lawmakers
said.
Wyden said he will also unveil a new "billionaires tax" that
would impose a levy on individuals with unrealized assets worth
more than $1 billion and a three consecutive years of annual
income of $100 million.
The White House signaled support for the legislation, saying
Biden would continue to fight to include it in his "Build Back
Better" bill. The three lawmakers also predicted widespread
backing from the 50-member Senate Democratic caucus, including
moderate Senator Joe Manchin.
But the strategy, particularly the more unconventional
billionaires tax, could face pushback from Democrats in the
House of Representatives, who favor more straightforward hikes
in tax rates for corporations and wealthy individuals to pay for
Biden's plan.
Democratic Senator Kyrsten Sinema, a moderate who had opposed
raising the corporate tax rate, said the proposal unveiled on
Tuesday represented a "common sense" step toward ensuring that
highly profitable companies pay what she called a "reasonable
minimum corporate tax" on their profits.
Democrats had shifted their plans on taxation in the face of
Sinema's opposition to raising the corporate tax rate and the
top personal income tax rate to pay for the hefty spending plan,
which is a pillar of Biden's domestic agenda.
(Reporting by David Morgan, Tyler Clifford and Trevor Hunnicutt;
Editing by Tim Ahmann, Howard Goller and Grant McCool)
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