Keep up to date with Peterson Institute publications, events, and interviews via email, podcast, or RSS. More information on subscription options.
Use filters to narrow your search through our publications and events.
by Gary Clyde Hufbauer, Peterson Institute for International Economics
and Jisun Kim, Peterson Institute for International Economics
March 2009
![]() |
Listen to related interview |
The United States maintains a complicated tax system with multiple loopholes but accompanied by high statutory corporate rates, at about 39 percent (federal plus state). Team Obama should simplify the corporate tax regime and lower the federal marginal (i.e., statutory) tax rate to 25 percent or less. The United States should also adopt a territorial approach to the taxation of "active income" earned by foreign operations of US-based MNCs. In other words, the United States should end any US taxation of active income earned by subsidiaries operating abroad. Shifting from a worldwide tax system to a territorial system would ensure that the United States remains an attractive location for MNC headquarters—since the active business income of foreign subsidiaries would no longer be subjected to a residual US corporate tax. The authors also recommend ways to deal with abuse of transfer pricing, and they support another tax holiday, at a 5.25 percent repatriation rate, both to gain revenue and to make it easier for corporations to raise cash in the midst of the financial crisis.
View full document [pdf]
RELATED INTERVIEWS
Are High Corporate Taxes Shipping Jobs Overseas? May 6, 2009
RELATED LINKS
Policy Brief 11-16: US Tax Discrimination Against Large Corporations Should Be Discarded October 2011
Policy Brief 11-2: Corporate Tax Reform for a New Century April 2011
Policy Brief 10-10: Higher Taxes on Multinationals Would Hurt US Workers and Exports May 2010
Congressional Testimony: Tax Reform and the Tax Treatment of Debt and Equity July 13, 2011
Op-ed: America Badly Needs a Value Added Tax April 21, 2005
Paper: Tax Policy in a Global Economy Revised February 2000