Tax

Policy and Legal

 Manufacturers Drive Treasury Deal Scuttling Retaliatory Tax


In a move the NAM called  “a massive triumph for manufacturing in America,” the Treasury Department on Thursday announced a deal with G-7 allies to exempt American companies from certain taxes imposed by other nations—resulting in Congress and the administration agreeing to remove from the “One Big Beautiful Bill Act” a U.S. tax on companies from those countries.

What’s going on: “Today’s deal is a win for manufacturing and a win for America,” said NAM President and CEO Jay Timmons. “Manufacturers have long raised concerns about the overreaching and extraterritorial nature of OECD Pillar 2.”

  • Pillar 2 of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development introduces a global minimum 15% corporate tax rate, which it allows other countries to collect if companies’ home nations do not.
  • Under the terms of the deal announced Thursday, Pillar 2 taxes will not apply to U.S. companies, paving the way for the elimination of the Section 899 retaliatory tax from Congress’s reconciliation bill.
  • The 899 provision would have allowed the U.S. to impose retaliatory taxes on companies from countries with punitive tax policies, including the ones in the OECD regime.

What it will do: The move means manufacturers of all sizes will be relieved of the threat of damaging tax burdens, the NAM said, as domestic businesses will no longer face the threat of Pillar 2 and foreign-headquartered companies will not be impacted by Section 899.

What’s next: “It’s now time for the Senate to vote and for the House to send this bill to President Trump’s desk by July 4,” Timmons said.

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