Biden working with G20 leaders to 'create a cartel' to 'keep business taxes high,' conservative critic says
Corporate tax concerns taking backseat to earnings: Market expert Bob Doll
Crossmark Global Investments Chief Investment Officer Bob Doll provides insight into taxes, earnings and the markets.
President Biden and other world leaders at the G20 Summit in Rome endorsed a global minimum tax on corporations, a move U.S. officials are hoping will help bolster the president's Build Back Better agenda.
G20 finance ministers in July had formerly agreed on a 15% minimum tax. The measure needed formal endorsement at the summit from the world’s economic powerhouses Saturday in Rome.
In a statement, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen claimed the agreement made by the leaders on international tax rules, with a minimum global tax, "will end the damaging race to the bottom on corporate taxation."
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