After a summer in which high-profile companies like Burger King and medical device giant Medtronic drew criticism for restructuring and moving their headquarters overseas to avoid U.S. taxes, the Obama administration is taking action against the controversial tax scheme.
The Treasury Department issued new rules on corporate “inversions” that would limit U.S. multinationals’ ability to access their foreign subsidiaries’ earnings without paying U.S. taxes on them.
The administration also made it more difficult for companies to conduct inversions in the first place: After an inversion, the previous owners of the U.S. multinational would have to own less than 80% of the new multinational, among other changes announced on Monday. The new rules “apply to deals closed today or after today,” the Treasury said in a statement.
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“While there’s no substitute for Congressional action, my Administration will act wherever we can to protect the progress the American people have worked so hard to bring about,” President Obama said in a statement.
“We’ve recently seen a few large corporations announce plans to exploit this loophole, undercutting businesses that act responsibly and leaving the middle class to pay the bill, and I’m glad that [Treasury] Secretary Lew is exploring additional actions to help reverse this trend,” he added.
Leading Democrats praised the administration’s reforms but stressed that Congress needed to act as well to stop the practice.
“The administration is taking important and necessary steps to stem the tide of inversions in the wake of Republicans’ refusal to act,” said Rep. Sander Levin, ranking member of the House Ways and Means Committee, who has co-authored legislation that would place further restrictions on the practice. Levin added, “While administrative action is vital, it is clear that a full and lasting solution can only come from Congress.”









