The maker of Emmy-winning shows such as The Crown and Black
Mirror said last month it was in talks with the Canadian
government for an investment over a minimum of five years.
That decision was part of a broad review under Canadian Heritage
Minister Melanie Joly, which included plans to modernize funding
programs and review copyright, broadcasting and
telecommunications legislation.
The government did not tax Netflix as some had proposed, opening
the streaming service provider to criticism in Canada. (http://bit.ly/2wLo4Ma)
Netflix said on Tuesday its Canadian investment was approved
under the Investment Canada Act, and that no tax deals were part
of the approval to launch its new Canadian presence. But is also
said it was not paying sales tax in line with existing Canadian
laws.
"Netflix follows tax laws everywhere we operate. Under Canadian
law, foreign online services like Netflix aren't required to
collect and remit sales tax," said Corie Wright, Netflix's
director of global public policy. (http://nflx.it/2yBTf11)
The company also said it would spend an additional C$25 million
($20 million) over five years toward "market development" in the
country, hosting recruitment drives and cultural events to boost
the local production community.
(Reporting by Nivedita Bhattacharjee; editing by Patrick Graham
and Saumyadeb Chakrabarty)
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