US-based multinational companies will be exempt from global tax deal
[January 06, 2026] By
FATIMA HUSSEIN
WASHINGTON (AP) — U.S. multinational corporations will be exempted from
paying more corporate taxes overseas in a deal finalized by the
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.
The OECD announced Monday that nearly 150 countries have agreed on the
plan, initially crafted in 2021, to stop large global companies from
shifting profits to low-tax countries, no matter where they operate in
the world.
The amended version excludes large U.S.-based multinational corporations
from the 15% global minimum tax after negotiations between President
Donald Trump's administration and other members of the Group of Seven
wealthy nations.
OECD Secretary-General Mathias Cormann said in a statement that the
agreement is a “landmark decision in international tax co-operation" and
“enhances tax certainty, reduces complexity, and protects tax bases.”

U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent called the agreement “a historic
victory in preserving U.S. sovereignty and protecting American workers
and businesses from extraterritorial overreach.”
The most recent version of the deal waters down a landmark 2021
agreement that set a minimum global corporate tax of 15%. The idea was
to stop multinational corporations, including Apple and Nike, from using
accounting and legal maneuvers to shift earnings to low- or no-tax
havens.
Those havens are typically places like Bermuda and the Cayman Islands,
where the companies actually do little or no business.
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 Former Treasury Secretary Janet
Yellen was a key driver of the 2021 OECD global tax deal and made
the corporate minimum tax one of her top priorities. The plan was
widely panned by congressional Republicans who said it would make
the U.S. less competitive in a global economy.
The Trump administration in June re-negotiated the
deal when congressional Republicans rolled back a so-called revenge
tax provision from Trump’s big tax and spending bill that would have
allowed the federal government to impose taxes on companies with
foreign owners, as well as on investors from countries judged as
charging “unfair foreign taxes” on U.S. companies.
Tax transparency groups have criticized the amended OECD plan.
“This deal risks nearly a decade of global progress on corporate
taxation only to allow the largest, most profitable American
companies to keep parking profits in tax havens,” said Zorka Milin,
policy director at the FACT Coalition, a tax transparency nonprofit.
Tax watchdogs argue the minimum tax is supposed to halt an
international race to the bottom for corporate taxation that has led
multinational businesses to book their profits in countries with low
tax rates.
Congressional Republicans applauded the finalized deal. Senate
Finance Committee Chair Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, and House Ways and
Means Committee Chair Jason Smith, R-Mo., said in a joint statement:
“Today marks another significant milestone in putting America First
and unwinding the Biden Administration’s unilateral global tax
surrender.”
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