25 Countries with the Lowest Corporate Tax Rates

In this piece, we will take a look at the 25 countries with the lowest corporate tax rates. For more countries, head on over to the 5 Countries with the Lowest Corporate Tax Rates.

Corporate tax is the amount of money that a company pays the government on its income. It is generally the last calculation on a firm's income statement, computed when expenses such as direct material costs, labor costs, marketing expenses, administrative overhead, research and development, and interest payments are subtracted from the net sales.

Corporate tax rates are not the same around the world. In fact, there is a significant variance between the lowest and highest amounts. For instance, several countries and territories, as we will discuss below, have a corporate tax rate of 0%. In comparison, one of the highest corporate tax rates in the world is for public industrial and commercial enterprises that operate in the Union of the Comoros - a small African nation with a nominal per capita income of $1,349. These Comoran companies can end up paying as much as a staggering 50% of their incomes as tax - a fact that is likely to make many boardrooms shudder. On a side note, as if this weren't enough, Comoros is also one of the few countries in the world that taxes marriage expenses.

These taxes (the corporate ones) are also one of the more controversial topics in finance, government, and public discourse, due to the thorny issue of tax avoidance. Tax avoidance is different from tax evasion, as it is not illegal and simply involves a firm structuring its operations in a way that lets it minimize the tax expense. Research conducted by the Danish think tank Kraka, the University of Berkeley, and the Danish Ministry of Finance suggests that if tax avoidance were eliminated, then the U.S. could see domestic profits exceed by up to 10%. The percentage is even higher for other countries; for instance, EU countries could see profits grow by 20%, and tax haven regions such as Bermuda, Bahamas, and the British Virgin Islands could see their profits drop by a staggering 55%.

The highly, should we say 'profitable' nature of tax avoidance also results in rather creative names for these schemes, such as the Double Irish, Single Malt, the Dutch Sandwich, and the Bermuda Black Hole. In fact, the Bermuda Black Hole saw nonfinancial U.S. firms amass a whopping $1 trillion in offshore operations by 2017 according to McKinsey. Most tech companies, such as Apple Inc. (NASDAQ:AAPL) and Alphabet Inc. (NASDAQ:GOOGL) have been accused of these schemes, and Apple was fined a whopping $13 billion in 2016 by the European Commission because of Black Hole operations.