The foreign minister said that introducing a global minimum tax for corporations would be the “coup de grace” for the European economy and put the Hungarian economy to trial. Péter Szijjártó is in Washington, DC, meeting representatives of ten US companies, two US senators and five congressmen, and will address a forum of Americans for Tax Reform, a conservative advocacy group, on the issue of the global minimum tax. The global minimum tax would threaten hundreds of thousands of jobs in Hungary, and essentially “reduce Hungary to the state of affairs in 2010,” the ministry quoted Minister Szijjártó as saying. Hungary’s low corporate tax rate, “officially 9% but in practice coming to 6-7 percent in view of discounts and investment support”, has been the basis of its competitiveness and the root of its investment records over the recent years, he said. The planned minimum tax of 15 percent would double that rate, he added.
Minister Szijjártó noted that the global minimum tax was a hot topic in US politics, too, as an aim of the Democrat government staunchly rejected by Republicans. The autumn midterm elections, therefore, may bring a shakeup on the issue, he said. So far, the US government has protested Hungary’s veto against the European introduction of the minimum tax “at several forums”, culminating in the US terminating the two countries’ agreement on the elimination of double taxation, he said. “We have high hopes that the agreement will be put into effect again once the political winds change,” Minister Szijjártó said. So far, the political argument has made no negative impact on bilateral economic ties, he said, adding that “US companies support low Hungarian taxes”. Company leaders are more concerned about high inflation and skyrocketing fuel and energy prices, he said. “It is important for us in Hungary to do everything in our power to remain a local exception from the great global recession,” Minister Szijjártó said, noting the importance of price caps, curbed inflation, low taxes and utility price caps.
Photo credit: Facebook/Szijjártó Péter