How Reuters compared U.S. corporations’ taxes with their foreign rivals

June 22 (Reuters) – Reuters analyzed the filings of hundreds of U.S. and foreign companies to compare their tax bills, finding that the U.S. firms currently pay far lower taxes – and would likely continue to pay lower taxes under a tax hike proposed by U.S. President Joe Biden.

To identify comparable competitors among large firms, Reuters relied on the U.S. firms own assessments of their main rivals. About half of the 200 biggest firms by market capitalization in the S&P 500 published the names of their chief competitors, both domestic and foreign. Reuters then excluded all the firms that listed only domestic competitors rather than international rivals.

The news organization also excluded seven firms that posted a loss in 2020, and another three firms with tax bills far lower than was typical for the group, to prevent unrepresentative outliers from skewing the overall analysis.

That left 52 U.S. firms to analyze, who named a total of 200 foreign competitors that Reuters used for comparison. Those U.S.-based companies were all multinationals with some foreign operations, and they represented a broad cross-section of sectors, including technology, pharmaceuticals, consumer goods and heavy industry sectors. Their market capitalization ranged from $40 billion to $1.9 trillion.

The average effective tax rate the U.S. firms reported was 16%, compared with an average effective rate reported by their competitors of 24%.

To assess the impact of Biden’s tax proposal on the U.S. firms, Reuters applied Biden’s proposed rates of 28% for U.S. income and the proposed minimum rate of 21% on overseas income to the companies’ 2020 earnings.

U.S. business lobbies say comparisons of effective tax rates, as in this analysis, don’t offer a complete picture of how U.S. tax policy affects the global competitiveness of U.S. firms. They also argue that any tax boost will hurt American firms.

Read the Insight hereReporting by Tom Bergin; editing by Brian Thevenot

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Source: https://www.reuters.com/business/how-reuters-compared-us-corporations-taxes-with-their-foreign-rivals-2021-06-22/

World Economic Magazine

Recent Posts

Europe’s Private Credit Moment: Why 2026 Could Redefine the Asset Class

Dubai leveraged its strategic coastline to become a global trade hub, exporting “access itself” through…

2 days ago

DUBAI REAL ESTATE INDUSTRY SURGE SIGNALS MARKET MATURITY, SAYS LUXURY DEVELOPER

Keturah Reserve launches final sales phase as 2025 data reveals AED86B capital gains and major…

2 days ago

U.K. Economy Contracts Again as Services Weakness Deepens, Cementing Expectations of a Bank of England Rate Cut

The UK economy contracted again in late 2025, with weaker services output fuelling expectations of…

5 days ago

U.S. Lawmakers Raise Alarm Over Sale of Nvidia H200 Chips to China

U.S. lawmakers are raising alarms over Nvidia’s AI chip exports to China, warning that allowing…

6 days ago

Historical Recognition for Akinwumi Adesina: University of Gambia Re-Names Faculty of Agriculture and Environmental Sciences in his honor

The historic occasion recognized and immortalized Adesina’s name, leadership, contributions to Africa, and his visionary…

6 days ago

BUOYANT DUBAI REAL ESTATE MARKET ROUNDS OFF LANDMARK YEAR WITH DECEMBER SURGE

Record 215,700 annual sales worth AED 686.8 billion underscore city's position as a premier global…

6 days ago