EU fails to agree corporate tax reform as Hungary rejects deal

Hungary opposes setting a minimum corporate tax of 15 percent on big multinationals, preventing an EU deal.

Hungarian Finance Minister Mihaly Varga speaks during a business conference in Budapest
Hungarian Finance Minister Mihaly Varga speaks during a business conference in Budapest [File: Bernadett Szabo/Reuters]

Hungary’s Finance Minister Mihaly Varga has told his European Union counterparts that his country cannot support reform of corporate taxation at this stage, effectively preventing a deal at the EU level.

An EU agreement had been expected on Friday after Poland dropped its opposition to setting a minimum corporate tax of 15 percent on big multinationals, but Hungary emerged as a last-minute hurdle and prevented a deal that requires the backing of all 27 EU states.

“Hungary cannot support the adoption of the global minimum tax directive at this stage,” Varga told finance ministers in a public session of a meeting.

He added: “The work is not ready. I think we have to continue the effort to find a solution.”

Disappointment

French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire, who had made the tax deal a key goal of the six-month French presidency of the EU ending in two weeks, did not hide his disappointment but urged ministers to continue the work to strike a deal at a later stage.

At the meeting, Poland’s Finance Minister Magdalena Rzeczkowska formally dropped its opposition to the deal.

The EU talks were meant to turn into law a global reform of corporate taxation, which was agreed to in October last year by nearly 140 countries.

Le Maire said all technical issues had been long solved, implying the deadlock was down to political concerns.

COVID funds

Poland and Hungary have been at odds with the European Commission, which has held up their receipt of COVID-19 recovery fund money over questions about their stance on the rule of law and other EU values.

Earlier in June, the Commission approved payments to Poland, whereas EU recovery funds for Hungary remain frozen.

The overhaul set a global minimum corporate tax of 15 percent on big multinationals and gave other countries a bigger share of the tax take on the earnings of big US digital groups such as Apple Inc and Alphabet Inc’s Google.

The reform was originally intended to be applied in 2023, but its implementation has now been effectively pushed back to 2024.

US President Joe Biden’s administration is also struggling to pass legislation that would implement the global minimum tax deal.

Source: News Agencies