G20 nations pledge to ‘cooperate’ on taxing super-rich

(Rio de Janeiro) The G20 countries pledged Friday in Rio de Janeiro to “cooperate” so that the wealthiest people are taxed more, in the name of the fight against inequality, but without going so far as to agree on a global tax.


The issue dominated a two-day meeting of finance ministers from the world’s largest economies, which was to prepare for the G20 summit of heads of state and government scheduled for November 18-19, also in Rio.

“With full respect for tax sovereignty, we will endeavour to cooperate to ensure that very wealthy individuals are effectively taxed,” said a statement on “international tax cooperation” published at the end of the work.

The text stresses that “inequalities in wealth and income undermine economic growth and social cohesion and aggravate social vulnerabilities”, and advocates “effective, equitable and progressive fiscal policies”.

According to Brazilian Finance Minister Fernando Haddad, whose country chairs the group this year, “from a moral point of view it is important that the twenty richest nations consider that we have a problem which is to have progressive taxation on the poor and not on the rich.”

PHOTO PABLO PORCIUNCULA, AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

Fernando Haddad, Brazilian Minister of Finance

“Equal and sustainable societies”

During a closing press conference, the minister stressed that the G20 countries agree on the need to “work for more transparent, fair and equitable tax systems, including for the ultra-rich, who must contribute to more equal and sustainable societies.”

Brazil, led by left-wing President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, has pushed for a minimum tax on the wealthy, but has not succeeded, particularly because of the US’s rejection of international negotiations on the issue: while the US wants the richest to pay their fair share, it considers taxation to be primarily the business of each country. Germany has openly displayed its hostility to an internationally negotiated tax.

PHOTO PABLO PORCIUNCULA, ARCHIVES AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, President of Brazil

Conversely, France, South Africa, Spain and the African Union have shown their support for an international tax on the super-rich.

Author of a report on the subject at the request of Brazil, the French economist Gabriel Zucman was pleased that “for the first time in history, the G20 countries agree that the way we tax the super-rich must be changed.”

The statement released on Friday cites exchanges of best practices and the design of mechanisms to combat tax evasion, in order to launch international cooperation in tax matters.

“It is time to go further now,” responded American Nobel Prize winner in economics Joseph Stiglitz, calling for heads of state and government to give a mandate for coordinated minimum standards by November.

“The climate crisis is expected to cost trillions of dollars each year and it is outrageous to expect ordinary taxpayers to pay for it while the super-rich escape taxation,” said Camila Jardim, international policy specialist at Greenpeace, renewing the NGO’s call for a global tax.

The road still looks long, as any cooperation between States in matters of taxation is difficult by nature, because the latter are jealous of their fiscal sovereignty.

Three documents

With the G20 hampered by divisions between Western countries and Russia – also a member of the group – since the start of the war in Ukraine, drafting a joint communiqué remained a challenge.

But Brasilia achieved its goal with the publication of three texts: the “declaration” on taxation, a broader final communiqué and a document published separately by the Brazilian presidency, which alone mentions geopolitical crises.

The final communiqué signed by all countries makes no mention of the wars in Ukraine and Gaza, but simply refers to “wars and the escalation of conflicts” as risk factors for the global economy.

The statement signed by the Brazilian presidency, for its part, reports that some countries “expressed their views on Russia and Ukraine and the situation in Gaza.” Some members see the G20 as a relevant forum to discuss these issues, while others are of the opposite opinion.


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