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Finance Minister: US pressuring Hungary by terminating double taxation avoidance agreement

Mihály Varga said introducing the global minimum corporate tax is “unjustified” in a wartime situation amid runaway energy prices.

Minister Varga said the decision by the US president “came as no surprise”, adding that US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen had warned him by phone after a meeting of European Union finance ministers in June that the double taxation avoidance agreement between the two countries could be cancelled if Hungary didn’t change its position on the global minimum corporate tax. The government was officially informed of the termination of the agreement on Friday, he added. Minister Varga said the government believes the “real reason” the agreement was cancelled is not the official explanation involving tax policy and technical reasons, but that Hungary has “stood up for its own long-term interests and those of the European Union”. Minister Varga noted that Hungary had ratified a new version of the double taxation avoidance agreement in 2010 that addressed all of the concerns the Americans now raised. He said introducing the global minimum corporate tax is “unjustified” in a wartime situation amid runaway energy prices. He added that the international community had pushed back the real start of the global tax reform to 2024, leaving lots of time to negotiate and resolve issues.

The minister said introducing the global minimum corporate tax would hurt competitiveness and put jobs at risk, adding that a number of countries are not making any preparations to adopt the minimum task. He also pointed out that talks on the minimum tax fail to address taxation of digital multinationals which were initially targeted by the measure. If the government were to accept the proposed global minimum corporate tax, Hungary’s corporate tax rate would rise from 9 to 15 percent, “which would not help local businesses”, he said. Minister Varga said the double taxation avoidance agreement with the US isn’t a “prerequisite” for strong economic ties between the two countries. He added that Brazil, Argentina, Serbia and Singapore have no such agreement with the US. US companies have picked Hungary because of the good environment for doing business and favourable taxes, he said. “We find it strange that the United States would terminate the tax agreement with Hungary, but not the one with Russia, for example,” he added.

Photo credit: Facebook/Varga Mihály