Corporate tax avoidance: it's no longer enough to take half measures
Multinationals' failure to pay is hitting governments' ability to fight the climate crisis and inequality
Globalisation has gotten a bad rap in recent years, and often for good reason. But some critics, not least Donald Trump, place the blame in the wrong place, conjuring up a false image in which Europe, China, and developing countries have snookered America's trade negotiators into bad deals, leading to Americans' current woes. It's an absurd claim: after all, it was America - or, rather, corporate America - that wrote the rules of globalisation in the first place.
That said, one particularly toxic aspect of globalisation has not received the attention it deserves: corporate tax avoidance. Multinationals can all too easily relocate their headquarters and production to whatever jurisdiction levies the lowest taxes. And in some cases, they need not even move their business activities, because they can merely alter how they "book" their income on paper.
Related: Will London's post-Brexit future be as gloomy as predicted?
Continue reading...