Yellen says U.S. aims to move ahead with global minimum corporate tax
despite setback
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[July 16, 2022] By
Andrea Shalal
NUSA DUA, Indonesia (Reuters) -The United
States will look for every opportunity to move ahead and enact a global
minimum corporate tax agreement despite the opposition of a key
Democratic senator, Joe Manchin, to raising corporate taxes, U.S.
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said.
Yellen told reporters on Saturday that finance officials from the Group
of 20 major economies reached strong consensus about many issues,
including the need to address a worsening food security crisis, despite
differences over Russia's war in Ukraine that prevented the leaders from
issuing a joint statement.
Manchin, who holds the pivotal vote in the evenly divided Senate, this
week said he would not support a Democratic proposal for new climate
change spending and higher taxes for corporations and wealthier
Americans.
His opposition could imperil passage of legislation that would commit
the United States to a 15% global minimum corporate tax, a key part of
an agreement that Yellen helped negotiate with nearly 140 countries last
year.
"We are very committed to moving ahead with this. This is a truly
important global initiative," she said on the second day of a two-day
G20 meeting in Bali. "I can tell you that we will continue to look for
every possible opportunity that we have to move this forward."
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She said the United States had a strong incentive to move forward because as
other countries enacted the tax agreement, they would be taxing the foreign
profits of U.S. companies, while the United States would be leaving "that tax
revenue on the table rather than capturing it ourselves."
Yellen said it was important that Manchin did signal support for legislation to
reduce prescription drug prices for seniors and extending subsidies that help
keep health insurance costs lower.
On his opposition to climate change provisions, Yellen said Treasury would
support U.S. President Joe Biden's plans to use executive action, and would
continue initiatives under the Financial Stability Oversight Council to evaluate
the risks posed by climate change to financial institutions.
She also addressed the recent strong appreciation of the U.S. dollar and said it
was due to strong economic growth, moves by the Fed to raise interest rates, and
capital inflows.
"The U.S. position is that we believe in market-determined exchange rates" and
it is very rarely appropriate to intervene, Yellen said, adding "I do not see
this as one of these occasions."
(Reporting by Andrea ShalalEditing by Mark Potter and Clelia Oziel)
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