The real tax rate paid by multinational corporations in 47 countries revealed

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Image by Markus Winkler from Pixabay
Image by Markus Winkler from Pixabay

Multinational corporations are paying vastly different effective tax rates around the world, and Australia has one of the highest effective tax rates, according to a new analysis. The study found that although many countries have similar tax rates set out in legislation, the rates that multinationals actually pay differs greatly. At one extreme end of the effective tax rate range in Luxembourg, multinationals pay just 1-8% of gross income in taxes, while at the other end in Norway, multinationals pay as much as 46-67%, despite the two countries having nearly identical statutory tax rates of 28% and 29%. 

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From: PLOS

Study reveals the real tax rate paid by multinational corporations in 47 countries

Calculations of effective tax rates of multinational corporations across countries show drastic differences between those rates and statutory tax rates.

Despite a similar statutory tax rate for multinational corporations (MNCs) across many countries, the effective tax rate that MNCs actually pay differs greatly — as low as 1% of gross income in Luxembourg and as high as 67% in Norway. That’s one conclusion of a study published this week in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Javier Garcia-Bernardo of Utrecht University, the Netherlands, Petr Janský of Charles University, Czechia, and Thomas Tørsløv of Danmarks Nationalbank, Denmark. The study comes on the heels of recent European Union legislation that aims to set a minimum effective tax rate across countries and redistribute MNC profits to address tax avoidance. 

Tax avoidance by MNCs contributes to inequalities both between and within countries, and understanding the effective tax rates paid by MNCs in different countries is critical to minimizing these inequalities. In the new study, researchers developed a new framework for computing the country-level effective tax rates for MNCs, using MNC income statement data that includes income across countries and taxes paid in different jurisdictions. They applied the framework to MNCs in 47 countries, mostly belonging to the European Union.

The study found that the amount of taxes accrued by MNCs varies considerably from country to country and reveals the extent of the differences between effective tax rates and statutory tax rates for many countries. At the extreme ends of the effective tax rate range were Luxembourg, with MNCs paying a rate of 1-8% of gross income in taxes, and Norway, with MNCs paying as much as 46-67%, despite the two countries having nearly identical statutory tax rates of 28% and 29%.

The authors conclude that statutory rates do not provide a great deal of information on the tax burden that MNCs actually face in many countries, and that better data is needed to obtain more reliable effective tax rate estimates and achieve more informed policy decisions.

The authors add: “We find that effective tax rates substantially differ across countries and from statutory rates for some countries. These findings should be of particular interest in the light of recent changes in the taxation of multinationals worldwide such as the 2021 agreement of more than 100 countries worldwide to a global minimum tax rate of 15%.”

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PLOS ONE
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Organisation/s: Utrecht University, The Netherlands, Charles University, Czechia
Funder: Javier Garcia-Bernardo has received funding from the European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (grant agreement number 638946). https://erc.europa.eu/ Petr Janský acknowledges support from the Czech Science Foundation (CORPTAX, 21-05547M) (https://gacr.cz/), the Greens/EFA Group in the European Parliament (https://www.greens-efa.eu/) and the H2020-MSCA-RISE project GEMCLIME-2020 GA No. 681228 (https://www.eeas.europa.eu/eeas/horizon-2020_en). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
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