U.S. Withdraws from UN Debates on Taxing the Wealthy and Multinationals

Explore why the United States decided to withdraw from UN negotiations aimed at taxing wealthy individuals and multinational corporations, a move that has sparked considerable controversy.
A Universal Tax Convention Proposed by the UN
The United Nations (UN) has sparked a conversation on a “universal” tax cooperation convention aimed at creating a fairer tax system for multinationals and wealthy individuals. This bold initiative has, however, faced early opposition.
American Opposition
Following the announcement of this initiative, the United States immediately voiced its disapproval. A representative stated that the convention could unacceptably hinder national abilities to devise tax policies tailored to their citizens, businesses, and workers.
Just days before, Donald Trump had withdrawn the US from the OECD agreement on a minimum 15% tax rate on multinational profits.
The Need for New Tax Rules
Ramy Youssef, the negotiation committee’s president, pointed out that “billions of dollars lost annually due to profit shifting, harmful tax competition, and illegal financial flows” especially deprive “the most vulnerable countries of critical resources.”
He believes that “international tax rules must evolve with a changing world” to serve all states and peoples effectively.
Principles of the Convention
Key principles of this convention include ensuring a fair distribution of taxing rights, equitable taxation of multinational corporations, and combating tax fraud and evasion by wealthy individuals. According to the NGO Tax Justice Network, states lose $492 billion annually in taxes due to tax havens. 43% of these losses are enabled by the tax policies of eight countries, including the United States.
The decision-making process of the committee is yet to be finalized. This crucial issue will be discussed during the inaugural session of the convention in New York. The European Union has advocated for a consensus, emphasizing that without it, the 27 EU countries might not participate in the future Convention.