This week, Assaf Harpaz (Georgia, Google Scholar) reviews a new work by Rifat Azam (Interdisciplinary Center Herzliya; Google Scholar), The Global Minimum Tax and Intra Western Tax Competition, 44 Berkeley J. Int’l L. ___ (2026).
Implementation of the OECD’s two-pillar solution, including the Global Minimum Tax, has been thrown into disarray following President Trump’s January 2025 memorandum declaring that “the Global Tax Deal has no force or effect in the United States.” The U.S.’s withdrawal from the Global Minimum Tax carries significant implications for global tax competition and multilateral tax cooperation.
In a new paper, Rifat Azam challenges the prevailing narrative under which the Global Minimum Tax should be lauded as a triumph of multilateral tax cooperation. Instead, Azam argues that the Global Minimum Tax represents a tactical maneuver within a fragmented international economic framework.
The article examines the conflicting interests among Western states, highlighting the EU’s pursuit of strategic autonomy and the U.S.’s shifting policy priorities. Moreover, it explores the ways countries can employ to circumvent the Global Minimum Tax and continue engaging in new forms of tax competition.
The article begins by articulating the GloBE rules, with helpful examples for the application of the UTPR, IIR, and QDMTT. While negotiations were purportedly inclusive, Azam contends that GloBE unfolded within a world order dominated by Western hegemony – an outcome of political negotiation between the EU and the Biden administration. Azam argues that the Global Minimum Tax disproportionately harms developing countries which often rely on tax incentives to attract investment (e.g., R&D), and stimulate economic growth. Additionally, developing countries were largely excluded from the OECD’s negotiation processes, with many lacking the administrative resources to implement its outputs. This section could benefit from a more detailed discussion, and some nuanced distinctions would be useful. For example, distinguishing between the economic interests and capacities of large market economies, least developing countries, and small island states (which are often tax havens). After all, many developing countries are adversely affected by BEPS and have supported a Global Minimum Tax. Meanwhile, some developing countries engage in BEPS and create negative fiscal externalities for other countries, including developing ones. Even if the Global Minimum Tax was substantively negotiated between the U.S. and EU, is it uniformly detrimental to all developing countries (and, if so, why did so many countries agree to it)?
The article proceeds to outline the interests underlying intra-western tax competition. Azam writes that the Global Minimum Tax is the result of Europe’s selective refortification and its pursuit of autonomy. He identifies several points of contention between the U.S. and EU, with the primary conflicts surrounding the taxation of U.S.-based Big Tech which generate substantial revenues in Europe. While European countries have been advocating for more robust taxation of these firms, the U.S. has continued to be protective of its digital technology giants. Also, Azam highlights the tension between U.S.’s domestic international tax regime (GILTI and BEAT) and the Global Minimum Tax, describing Senate Republicans’ opposition to the latter.
The article then critiques the paradoxical effect of the Global Minimum Tax, which, instead of eliminating tax competition, merely redirects it into less transparent forms such as subsidies and refundable tax credits. Azam describes Pillar Two as a competitive tool for regulating the global digital economy, which he refers to as a “cartel of governments” – all benefiting from increased tax revenue. Nonetheless, most countries already have corporate income tax rates above 15%, so there remains an incentive to reduce corporate income tax rates. Thus, tax competition will continue but with a different “floor” and in new, less transparent domains. The GloBE rules do not limit all forms of competition, and Azam suggests that countries will utilize various tax credits (e.g., broad use of qualified refundable tax credits) and subsidies to engage in global tax competition. In addition, Azam cautions from the abuse of the QDMTT, in which QDMTT-compliant jurisdictions will not collect that revenue or collect it only on paper. In this context, the author may consider possible paths forward that could address these challenges. For example, what mechanisms could be developed to prevent tax competition in the wake of GloBE, and should these measures be multilateral?
In summary, the article makes several important scholarly contributions. It frames the narrative of the Global Minimum Tax as one defined by contrasting U.S. and European interests, rather than commendable multilateral cooperation. Furthermore, it underscores the paradox at the heart of Pillar Two: instead of reducing global tax competition, it may incentivize it. The article is especially timely given the crossroads in international tax cooperation and considering the U.S. proposal to extend key international tax provisions enacted under the TCJA.
Here’s the rest of this week’s SSRN Tax Roundup:
- Leyla Ates (Altınbaş University), Tax Information Production, Sharing, Use and Publication, UN FACTI Panel Background Paper 2 (May 28, 2025)
- Rifat Azam (IDC Herzliya), The Global Minimum Tax and Intra Western Tax Competition, 44 Berkeley J. Int’l L. (2026) (May 23, 2025)
- Andrés Báez (Max Planck Institute), Irrelevant or Even Worse? The Vicious Dilemma of the New Tax Treaty Preamble, 73 Can. Tax J. 1 (2025) (May 27, 2025)
- Katherine Cousins & Dominic de Cogan (Sheffield & Cambridge), Chapter 33 United Kingdom (May 23, 2025)
- Wei Cui (UBC), Policy Forum: Comparing Canadian Output-Based Pricing Systems, 73 Can. Tax J. 77 (2025) (May 27, 2025)
- Nicolin Decker, The Federal Trust Layer™: A Smart-Law Infrastructure for U.S. Financial Governance, Statutory Compliance, and Algorithmic Public Trust (May 28, 2025)
- Douglas W. Elmendorf, Glenn Hubbard & Zachary D. Liscow (Harvard Kennedy School, Columbia, Yale), Policies to Reduce Federal Budget Deficits by Increasing Economic Growth (May 28, 2025)
- Anthony C. Infanti (Pittsburgh), Taxation and Slavery in Colonial America, 116 Tax Notes State 385 (May 12, 2025); U. Pitt. Legal Studies Research Paper No. 2025-19 (May 28, 2025)
- Jeffery M. Kadet (Washington), Notice 2025-19, 2025–2026 Priority Guidance Plan (May 28, 2025)
- David Lin (Waterloo), Finances of the Nation: Survey of Provincial and Territorial Budgets, 2024–25, 73 Can. Tax J. 119 (2025) (May 27, 2025)
- Lawrence Lokken (Florida), Income Source in a Digital Age, Bittker & Lokken, Federal Taxation of Income, Estates & Gifts (May 28, 2025)
- Olivia Lubarsky (American), The IRS’s Misguided Playbook for NIL Collectives, 74 Am. U. L. Rev. (forthcoming 2025) (May 23, 2025)
- Jean-Philippe Meloche, Michael Robert-Angers & Luc Godbout (Montréal, Sherbrooke), Policy Forum: On the Way to a Distance-Based Tax?, 73 Can. Tax J. 57 (2025) (May 27, 2025)
- Edward A. Morse (Creighton), Important Developments in Federal Income Taxation (2024) (May 23, 2025)
- Edward A. Morse (Creighton), Taxpayer Privacy Protections: Restrictions and Remedies for Releasing Return Information, Belmont L. Rev. (May 23, 2025)
- Pedro David Nieto Olvera (Instituto Politécnico Nacional), Artificial Intelligence and Algorithms in Tax Auditing by the Tax Administration Service in Mexico: Analysis of Potential Biases (May 27, 2025)
- Gillian Petit, Lindsay M. Tedds & Selvia Arshad (Calgary), Policy Forum: Who Benefits? A Critical Analysis of Canada's Federal Basic Personal Amount and Personal Tax Credits, 72 Can. Tax J. 837 (2024) (May 27, 2025)
- Samantha J. Prince, Timothy Azizkhan & Rebecca Hatton (Penn State Dickinson Law & University of Arkansas), Response to IRS Seeking Comments for Priority Guidance 2025–2026 (May 29, 2025)
- Blaine G. Saito (Ohio State), Tax Regulations in a Loper Bright Light, Ohio State Legal Studies Research Paper No. 924; Fla. Tax Rev. (forthcoming 2025) (May 27, 2025)
- Julia Sinnig (Université du Luxembourg), Principles of Regulating Multinational Enterprises (May 28, 2025)
- Alex Usher (Higher Education Strategy), Finances of the Nation: Student Assistance in Canada—A Long-Term Perspective, 72 Can. Tax J. 859 (2024) (May 27, 2025)
- Alex Zhang (Emory), The Forgotten Attribution Power, 135 Yale L.J. (forthcoming 2026) (May 29, 2025)
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