The International Monetary Fund (IMF) released a staff paper noting
that corporate tax avoidance negatively impacts all economies, but hurts
developing countries the most. The IMF’s release comes as the G20, the
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and United Nations
bodies seek vehicles to diminish corporate tax avoidance.
“The developing world loses more in corporate tax avoidance than
it receives in aid from developed countries,” stated Eric LeCompte,
Executive Director of the religious anti-poverty group, Jubilee USA
Network. “The paper shows that when multinational corporations shift
their profits to another country to pay less taxes, we see higher levels
of global inequality.”
The IMF paper is entitled “Spillovers in International Corporate
Taxation.” “Spillovers” are the impact of one country’s policies on
another country. By shifting profits to countries with low tax-rates
(often so-called “tax havens”), corporations avoid paying their taxes in
the countries where they make those profits. The paper notes that this
is a particularly large problem in developing countries, which need
corporate taxation to fund social services. The paper argues that “many
developing countries…need to be better protected against the avoidance
of tax on capital gains on natural resources.”
“These ‘spillovers’ are more like a flood,” noted LeCompte. “For
every $1 poor countries are receiving in official aid, nearly $10 is
leaving through corruption and tax avoidance.”
Read the IMF paper.
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