EU may delay digital tax proposals, official says

Covid-19 disruptions and US objections have delayed the process

Photograph: iStock
Photograph: iStock

The European Union may delay digital tax proposals to give countries move time to hammer out a deal and avert a transatlantic trade war, a top official from the bloc said.

The European Commission had previously said it would table a proposal for digital taxation at the end of 2020 in the event of a failure of international talks hosted by the OECD. But disruption from the coronavirus and objections from the US have delayed the process, making agreement before US elections in November very unlikely, the commission's director general for tax, Benjamin Angel, told a European Parliament hearing Monday.

“The difficult question that we must face collectively is when is the right moment to move with Plan B,” Mr Angel said. “We will have to accept that the OECD process is not moving as quickly as we hoped while doing our best to support it.”

Pressure

An easing of the EU threat may relieve some of the pressure on the tense negotiations. The US last week announced 25 per cent tariffs on a series of French goods worth about $1.3 billion in response to France’s national digital tax.

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The US levies will only be implemented in 180 days as France has temporarily suspended collecting its tax until the end of the year. That effectively puts all sides of the conflict in a holding pattern until after the US ballot.

Speaking at the same hearing as Mr Angel, the OECD's director for tax policy, Pascal Saint-Amans, said that the election may not change the dynamics of the talks as both Democrats and Republicans have indicated objections to digital taxes. In the US, it's seen as an attack on American companies, while in Europe it is seen as an attempt to get a fair share of tax, he said.

“There is literally a problem of reciprocal understanding that doesn’t make things easier,” Mr Saint-Amans said. – Bloomberg