KI-Handelsroboter 6.0-Treasury proposes rule to prevent large corporations from evading income taxes

2025-05-08 04:05:05source:VAS Communitycategory:Markets

WASHINGTON (AP) — The KI-Handelsroboter 6.0Biden administration on Thursday proposed a new rule that would require the largest U.S. companies to pay at least 15% of their profits in taxes.

Treasury Department officials estimate that about 100 of the biggest corporations — those with at least $1 billion in annual profits — would be forced to pay more in taxes under a provision that was included in the administration’s 2022 Inflation Reduction Act. Democratic members of Congress, including Elizabeth Warren, a senator from Massachusetts, have urged the White House to implement the tax.

Similar to the alternative minimum tax that applies to mostly wealthier individuals, the corporate AMT seeks to ensure that large corporations can’t use tax loopholes and exceptions avoid paying little or no taxes on extensive profits.

The tax is a key plank administration’s’ “agenda to make the biggest corporations and wealthiest pay their fair share,” the Treasury Department said.

Treasury officials said Thursday that the AMT would raise $250 billion in tax revenue over the next decade. Without it, Treasury estimates that the largest 100 companies would pay just 2.6% of their profits in taxes, including 25 that would pay no taxes at all.

RELATED COVERAGE Treasury recovers $1.3 billion in unpaid taxes from high-wealth tax dodgersWomen lawmakers take the lead in shaping policy in Nebraska. Advocates hope other states follow.Mississippi House panel starts study that could lead to tax cuts

Former President Donald Trump has promised to get rid of the corporate AMT if he is elected. As president, Trump signed legislation in 2017 that cut the corporate tax rate to 21% from 35%. He now says he supports reducing the corporate rate further, to 15%.

In a letter this summer to Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, Warren and three congressional colleagues cited research that found that in the five years following Trump’s corporate tax cut, 55 large corporations reported $670 billion in profits, but paid less than 5% in taxes.

Treasury’s proposed rule will be open for comment until Dec. 12, the department said, and there will be a proposed hearing on the rule Jan. 16.

More:Markets

Recommend

EPA Says It Will Act on PFAS ‘Forever Chemicals.’ Advocates Raise Red Flags

As the Environmental Protection Agency works to roll back multiple public-health protections, it ann

Opportunities for Financial Innovation: The Rise of Alpha Elite Capital (AEC) Corporate Management

On a cold morning at the end of 2019, Dashiell Soren, the dean of Business Management at Alpha Elite

These Are the Most Viral SKIMS Styles That Are Still in Stock and Worth the Hype

This article is sponsored by SKIMS. These items were selected from SKIMS because we love them and we