Chancellor praises global cooperation as UK G7 presidency comes to a close

13 Dec 2021 03:19 PM

The Chancellor today (13 December 2021) hailed the strength of the G7 and praised his international counterparts for their cooperation and resilience as he chaired his final meeting under the UK’s year-long presidency.

At the virtual Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors meeting, Rishi Sunak highlighted the string of major agreements that have been struck under the UK’s leadership over the past 12 months to help build a stronger and more resilient global economy.

This includes agreeing to back an historic international tax agreement to tackle the challenges that arise from an increasingly globalised and digital economy.

The landmark deal reforms global tax rules so big international companies will pay tax in the countries they do business, as well as cracking down on global avoidance through a 15% minimum tax rate. The UK has been spearheading the push for an international solution to the challenge of taxing technology multi-nationals for nearly a decade, with the Chancellor making a global agreement a key priority of the UK’s G7 Presidency.

Other key achievements include:

Chancellor Rishi Sunak said:

Thank you to my G7 colleagues for their tireless work this year – together we covered a huge amount in the most difficult of circumstances, including striking an historic agreement on global tax reform to create a fairer tax system fit for the 21st century.

I look forward to the German presidency and working together to address challenges we face next year.

During today’s meeting G7 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors discussed the global economy, climate change and antimicrobial resistance.

They agreed to remain vigilant to new variants of Covid-19 whilst cooperating on global supply issues and exchanged views on how to promote greater resilience of supply chains and ways to build a more accurate picture of possible future disruptions.

Following the commitment in the June G7 communique to a “multi-year effort” to deliver the change needed to meet our net zero climate commitments, G7 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors today agreed to more regular policy discussions to drive forward efforts to reduce emissions, to help advance broad-based international collaboration and coordination. This will be underpinned by joint macroeconomic analysis to help keep 1.5 degrees within reach, as agreed at COP26.

Building on a commitment from June, G7 Finance Ministers today also agreed, through the first joint statement of its kind, a commitment to strengthen actions across the G7 to support antibiotic development as part of tackling antimicrobial resistance.

Rishi Sunak praised the G7’s joint efforts, hard work and commitment, whilst highlighting the progress and successes made over the past 12 months.

The Chancellor concluded by urging ministers to continue to work together to tackle global issues before welcoming the new German Finance Minister Christian Lindner. Germany will take over as G7 Presidency on 1 January 2022.

Further information

Tax reforms

Digital currencies

Covid / pandemic preparedness

Support for Low-Income countries

Climate and nature