US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said the Biden administration will work with Group of 20 countries to set up a minimum global corporate income tax. [Forward to a friend]( | [Subscribe]( | [View in your browser]( [Top of The World]( --------------------------------------------------------------- In the news today US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen urges minimum global corporate income tax
[Then Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen speaks during a news conference following the Federal Open Market Committee meeting in Washington, 2017.]
Credit: Carolyn Kaster/AP/File photo In her first major address as US treasury secretary, Janet Yellen said the Biden administration will work with the Group of 20 countries to set up [a minimum global corporate income tax,]( citing a â[30-year race to the bottom](â in which countries have slashed corporate tax rates to attract multinational businesses. The move is seen as an effort to offset any disadvantages that might arise from Bidenâs plan to increase US corporate tax rates such as US companies relocating overseas in search of better taxation deals. âIt is important to work with other countries to end the pressures of tax competition and corporate tax base erosion,â [Yellen said in a virtual speech]( to the Chicago Council on Global Affairs. Yellenâs speech comes as the Biden administrationâs infrastructure proposal, known as the American Jobs Plan, [calls for a raise in the corporate income tax rate]( from 21% to 28% to fund the ambitious $2 trillion package. The plan would establish that the tax will be calculated on a per-country basis to deter companies from sheltering profits in international tax havens. What The World is following North Korea [is skipping the delayed Tokyo Summer Olympics]( due to COVID-19 concerns, the countryâs sports ministry stated Monday. With this move, North Korea becomes the first country to step out of the global games that start on July 23. North Korea wants to "protect the athletes from the global health crisis created by COVID-19," it said in a[statement](. North Korea has not made public its COVID-19 numbers. Pyongyangâs decision also slashed hopes from South Korea's President Moon Jae-in that the games could serve as a catalyst for diplomatic progress between both Koreas. And, Greenlanders [head to the polls on Tuesday]( in an early parliamentary election with vast geopolitical and environmental consequences. At the core of the election is the question of whether international companies should be allowed to mine the island's substantial deposits of rare-earth metals. Control over this could act as a check on [Chinaâs growing market dominance]( in the sector and the future production of products like phones and cars. The question split Greenlandâs three-party governing coalition in February. [Supporters see the Australian owned Kvanefjeld mining projec](t as a potential source of jobs and economic prosperity. The opposition party has stated that a majority of Greenlandâs 56,000 inhabitants, most of them Indigenous Inuit people, are against the project, largely for environmental reasons. --------------------------------------------------------------- From The World [Health workers in Brazil warn COVID-19 cases may spike again: âWe cannot continue to trivialize these deathsâ](
[Health care workers of the public Mobile Emergency Service bring a patient suspected of suffering from COVID-19 to the Base Public Hospital in Brasilia, Brazil, March 31, 2021.]
Credit: Eraldo Peres/AP Health officials in Brazil are bracing for a new spike in coronavirus infections after Easter holiday gatherings. âRight now, we are barely starting to see the number of new cases slow, with a lot of effort in recent restrictions by some states, but we are seeing increased numbers of people on the streets, and rising number of people traveling,â [said Isaac Schrarstzhaupt, a coordinator of Brazilâs COVID-19 Analysis Network](. [Activists argue the US doesn't do enough to protect domestic workers. Can an international hearing change that?](
[Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar urges Senate to take up a bill renewing the Violence Against Women Act at a news conference outside the US Capitol in Washington, on May 22, 2019.](
Credit: Matthew Daly/AP More than 2 million people in the US work behind the closed doors of private homes in the US as nannies, housekeepers, cooks and health aides. Many are people of color or immigrants, and they often face exploitation and abuse. After 14 years of advocacy efforts, [activists are calling the US out]( on an international stage for failing to protect domestic workers. --------------------------------------------------------------- The World conversations Mixed messages on the Iran deal
[Police officers stand in front of Hotel Imperial where a delegation from Iran is staying in Vienna, Austria, April 6, 2021.]
Credit: Florian Schroetter/AP The prospects for the revival of the Iranian Nuclear Deal are showing some glimmers of hope. [US and Iranian officials are heading to Vienna Tuesday.]( Senior diplomats from the world powers that also signed the 2015 nuclear agreement will be there as well. Representatives from Iran and the US will not be sitting down in the same room. Instead of talking face to face, discussions will be held via intermediaries. Ali Vaez is the Iran project director at the International Crisis Group. The World's host Marco Werman spoke to Vaez about the state of affairs. Here's an excerpt from their discussion below. Marco Werman: Maybe you can give us a sense of how this will work, Ali. They'll be in separate rooms down the hall from one another with designated runners essentially passing along notes. Ali Vaez: Yes, that's right. Basically, the remaining parties to the deal, that's Russia, China, UK, France and Germany and the European Union, those are the ones who will be going back and forth and trying to bridge the gaps between Iran and the US. Marco Werman: What does it say, though, that the US and Iran can't even sit at the same table at this point? Ali Vaez: It is definitely an indication of how painstakingly difficult it's going to be to get back into full compliance with the deal. This is mostly because Iran and the US have mismatched expectations and there's just so much mistrust between them. I mean, look, the endgame here is pretty clear. Both sides want to get back into full compliance with the deal. It's just the sequencing and how that's going to work out that is going to be basically extremely complicated to agree upon. --------------------------------------------------------------- Global Hit Facing violence and possible death, women accused of witchcraft in Ghana have found refuge in villages in the northern part of the country. They have been ostracized by their families and communities and their voices have been censored. Now, [their stories can now be heard on a new album]( called "[I've forgotten now who I used to be](," produced by Italian Rwandan photographer and filmmaker Marilena Umuhosa Delli and her husband, award-winning record producer Ian Brennan. ðµ [The women who participated in the recording were mostly elderly and wanted to remain anonymous. Most had never played music or written songs before and their songs were improvised.](
Credit: Marilena Umuhosa Delli --------------------------------------------------------------- In case you missed it from The World
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