The national digital taxes should be phased out as soon as the OECD tax deal is put into practice, the US and European states agreed. In return, the US promised to drop the sanctions it had imposed in response.
A group of European countries agreed with the United States on
Thursday (21 October) to withdraw their digital taxes. The move by
Austria, France, Italy, Spain, and the United Kingdom follows an
international tax deal agreed earlier this month that aims to allocate
parts of the profits from highly profitable, big corporations to
countries in which revenue is generated.
The agreement, communicated on 21 October, is a further step towards
resolving a longstanding grievance between US and European countries
over how to tax digital behemoths that make a lot of revenue in European
countries but do not book the corresponding profits there.
France and other European countries had unilaterally implemented
digital taxes in order to access parts of the profits generated in their
economies even if they were not booked there.
The US under former president Donald Trump reacted by threatening
retaliatory tariffs of 25% on a number of products from these countries.
President Joe Biden’s administration held on to this threat to keep
leverage over European countries in the negotiations over the OECD tax
deal.
On 8 October, 136 countries agreed on a deal, brokered by the
Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development, that allocates
25% of profits above a threshold of 10% of revenue from companies with a
turnover of above $20 billion to countries, in which the revenue was
generated.
This means that a small portion of profits from highly profitable
firms like Google or Apple will be allocated to France, Germany and
other states instead of being exclusively taxed in the countries of
their headquarters.
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