DUBLIN (Reuters) – A global deal overhauling how multinational companies are taxed is likely this year, an official overseeing the talks said on Wednesday, as low-tax Ireland called for any deal to work for small countries and allow for tax competition.

FILE PHOTO: Outside view of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, (OECD) headquarters in Paris September 3, 2009. REUTERS/Charles Platiau

The Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) has been coordinating talks among 140 countries for years and aims to reach a consensus by mid-2021, bolstered by a push from the new U.S. administration for a global corporate minimum tax rate.

“There is momentum, there is a new dynamic that is likely to bring us to a resolution,” OECD head of tax Pascal Saint-Amans told an online conference organised by the Irish government.

Saint-Amans said a July meeting of G20 finance ministers would be a very important milestone and that if some matters remained outstanding, there will certainly be a deal before G20 leaders meet in October.

Speaking at the same conference, the director general of finance at the Italian finance ministry, Fabrizia Lapecorella, said agreement by July was within reach. Italy is this year’s president of the Group of 20 rich and emerging nations.

Ireland is one of the countries with most to lose from the process with big multinationals such as Facebook, Google and Apple – attracted by the country’s 12.5% corporate tax rate – directly accounting for around one in eight jobs in the economy.

Finance Minister Paschal Donohoe said Ireland is committed to reaching an agreement but that the narrative in recent weeks has confirmed his reservations about a global minimum corporate tax rate.

Donohoe said countries must agree on the political principles underlying this concept and must have regard for countries like Ireland that use tax to attract jobs and large investments, adding that such discussions have yet to take place.

The tax system must also facilitate innovation, creativity and investment, he said, a nod to how the Irish regime allows companies to cut their tax bills through research and development.

“I believe that small countries, and Ireland is one of them, need to be able to use tax policy as a legitimate lever to compensate for the real, material and persistent advantage enjoyed by larger countries,” he said.

Reporting by Padraic Halpin; Editing by Hugh Lawson and Jane Merriman

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