Ben T. Smith IV, a longtime Silicon Valley executive and currently head of the Communications, Media and Technology practice at Kearney, speaks to Global Finance about the post-SVB venture capital industry and the pace of innovation.
Many of the world's richest countries are also the world's smallest: the pandemic and the global economic slowdown barely made a dent in their huge wealth.
Global Finance editor Andrea Fiano interviews Ásgeir Jónsson, Central Bank Governor of Iceland during Global Finance's World's Best Bank Awards at the National Press Club in Washington, DC on October 15th.
Trump's tax plans are expected to lighten corporate taxes, adding to profits of beleaguered US companies.
The US currently has the highest corporate tax rates in the world, but they could become among the lowest if president-elect Donald Trump goes ahead with his plan to reduce the federal corporate income tax rate from 35% to 15%.
Among those companies that could benefit the most are those that currently pay the highest effective rates. Personal finance website WalletHub scoured 2015 annual reports of Standard & Poor’s S&P 100 companies to analyze how they are taxed at the state, federal and international levels. It found that the overall tax rate that these companies pay is around 28%.
S&P 100 companies pay roughly 44% lower rates on international taxes than on US taxes, the WalletHub report states. Trump’s reform plan would impose a one-time 10% tax on all foreign earnings not yet taxed by the US. Once companies pay this 10% tax, they would be free to repatriate overseas earnings with no additional tax.
Only one S&P 100 company, General Motors, is actually paying a negative overall tax rate and is, therefore, due a discrete net tax benefit, according to WalletHub. Trump’s proposals could reduce or eliminate corporate loopholes that cater to special interests, as well as deductions made unnecessary or redundant by the new lower tax on corporations, the report states.
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