Income Inclusion Rule
From ACT Wiki
Tax - profit shifting - Global Minimum Tax - Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) - Pillar 2.
(IIR).
The Income Inclusion Rule is the primary calculation mechanism to ensure that large multinational entities are subject to a global minimum tax rate.
The tax jurisdiction of the ultimate parent collects top-up tax in relation to foreign subsidiaries with effective tax rates below the minimum rate of 15%.
- Two interlocking rules
- "The [Pillar 2] provisions are made up of the following two interlocking rules:
- • Income Inclusion Rule (IIR): this is the primary calculation mechanism. The ultimate parent territory collects the top-up tax associated with foreign subsidiaries with an effective tax rate (ETR) below 15%.
- • Undertaxed Payments Rule (UTPR): subsidiary territories collect the top-up tax in respect of a low-taxed overseas sister or parent company, where it is not captured by a parent territory IIR."
- Graham Robinson, international tax and treasury partner PwC & Iain McDonald international tax and treasury director PwC - The Treasurer, Issue 4 2022 - December 2022, p40.
See also
- Base erosion and profit shifting (BEPS)
- Corporation Tax
- Effective tax rate (ETR)
- Global Anti-Base Erosion Rules (GloBE)
- Income Tax
- Multinational corporation/company
- Nexus rule
- Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD)
- Parent company
- Pillar 1
- Pillar 2
- Profit shifting
- Regime
- Sister company
- Subject To Tax Rule
- Tax
- Tax avoidance
- Tax compliance
- Tax evasion
- Tax haven
- Tax rate
- Top-up Tax
- Transfer pricing
- Undertaxed Payments Rule (UTPR)