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CORE DP 2025-03

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29 January 2025, modified on 10 February 2025

 

The Enforcement Dilemma of the Global Minimum Tax / Jean Hindriks, e.a. 

To tackle profit shifting, the OECD/G20 Inclusive Framework proposes a Global Minimum Tax. The general presumption is that hightax countries will gain and low-tax countries will lose because the minimum tax will reduce their inward profit shifting. Recent papers have shown that the minimum tax can be welfare improving for all countries even if the welfare of the firm owners are taken into account (Johannesen 2022, Hebous and Keen 2023). The purpose of this paper is to extent that analysis to endogenous enforcement choices. By means of a formal model of international tax competition with heterogeneous countries, we study explicitely how the minimum tax will change the dynamics of tax competition, profit allocation and enforcement incentives. We show that in this broader framework, there exists a critical threshold for the minimum tax beyond which the low-tax country will defect from international enforcement cooperation, making the hightax country worse off. We also show that our analysis is robust to the presence of tax haven.