WASHINGTON—President Biden’s proposed 2023 budget changes a key piece of his international tax plan, moving away from a prior, harsher proposal and toward an evolving international standard for enforcing the global minimum-tax agreement.

The administration also responded—vaguely—to business complaints about how the proposed 15% global minimum tax could restrict U.S. tax breaks for corporate research, exports and low-income housing. Senior Treasury officials said they want to work with Congress to protect certain domestic incentives from U.S. and foreign minimum taxes.

To Read the Full Story

This post first appeared on wsj.com

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Electric-Car Batteries Get a Boost From Artificial Intelligence

Artificial intelligence is poised to add some juice to electric vehicles—by speeding…

40 acres and a mule won’t cut it anymore. What the fight for reparations looks like in 2021.

After decades of work from activists pushing the issue, presidential candidates, Congress…

Another Chinese city has overtaken New York for number of billionaires

HONG KONG — Three years ago, American entrepreneur Raj Oswal traveled to…

Prosecutor says defendants attacked Arbery because he was ‘a Black man running down the street’

The three white men charged with murder in the killing of Ahmaud…