Raising US corporate taxes could spur similar moves by other countries and hasten the establishment of a global minimum corporate tax, US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said on Wednesday.

US President Joe Biden last week unveiled a $2 trillion jobs and infrastructure plan paid for in part by an increase in the domestic corporate tax rate, and by sweeping up corporate profits stashed overseas.

A unilateral tax hike could put the United States at a disadvantage with other nations with lower rates, but Yellen predicted the proposed increase would encourage other countries to end the competition over providing corporations the most favorable tax climate.

"We're not only ending America's participation in the race to the bottom. The tax plan incentivizes the whole world to give up the game," Yellen told reporters.

"Destructive tax competition will only end when enough major economies stop undercutting one another and agree to a global minimum tax, and this proposal includes some powerful incentives for nations to do that."

Yellen earlier this week announced that Washington would push the G20 for an agreement on a global minimum corporate tax to stem the erosion of government revenues, and the bloc is expected to unveil a proposal by July.

G20 finance ministers met Wednesday and agreed to continue work on a "globally fair, sustainable and modern international tax system."

US Deputy Treasury Secretary Wally Adeyemo told CNBC News that the United States had confidence in being able to implement a global minimum corporate tax based on "the fact that so many of Secretary Yellen's counterparts from around the world joined her in calling for this in the last few days."

However he rejected the idea of a tax that would target only tech giants: "We've made that clear to our European counterparts that we will not support a tax that is discriminatory towards American companies, but we do support taxation to make sure that companies have to pay a level rate throughout the world."

Biden's plan partially reverses former president Donald Trump's 2017 corporate tax cut, a reform Yellen said cost the United States jobs and tax revenue.

US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen is leading the push for nations to adopt a global minimum tax to end competition over who can provide the most favorable tax climate to corporations
US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen is leading the push for nations to adopt a global minimum tax to end competition over who can provide the most favorable tax climate to corporations GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / POOL

"The law actually incentivizes American companies to offshore their workers and investments and to shift their profits to tax havens," she said.

The reform drove corporate tax collections to their lowest level since World War II, she said.

Under current law, the United States would lose roughly $2 trillion of corporate tax base over the coming decade "because of this broken system."

"Simply put, by choosing to compete on taxes, we've neglected to compete on the skill of our workers and the strength of our infrastructure," Yellen said.

Companies currently pay an effective tax rate of just under eight percent, according to details of the plan released by the Treasury.

The proposal raises the official rate to 28 percent from 21 percent, and increases the minimum tax on businesses to 21 percent, "ending the ability of multinationals to shield income in tax havens from US taxes," Treasury said.

However, the US tax rate would remain about seven percentage points below its level prior to the 2017 overhaul.

Another provision is targeted at companies that report massive incomes but pay no taxes at all, a practice Biden has vowed to end.

Under the plan, corporations that report "sky-high profits" to shareholders -- known as their "book income" -- but report no taxable income, would pay a minimum tax of 15 percent on those profits.

"In a typical year, around 200 companies report net income of $2 billion or more," the US Treasury said.

But due to loopholes in tax law, "a significant share pay zero or negative federal income taxes, despite reporting hundreds of billions of dollars in profits to shareholders," according to the report.