Lagging U.S. online giants, Europe calls on them to pay
up
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[September 30, 2017]
By Julia Fioretti and Philip Blenkinsop
TALLINN (Reuters) - French, Italian and
other European leaders upped the pressure on mostly U.S. tech giants to
pay their fair share of taxes in the European Union and abide by the
bloc's rules when they met on Friday, but were still far from a
consensus on the issue.
European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker said the EU executive
would propose new rules next year to provide a level playing-field
between bricks-and-mortar companies and digital ones.
But European countries are split over whether online companies such as
Google <GOOGL.O>, Facebook <FB.O> and Amazon <AMZN.O> should pay more
tax, with smaller EU members such as Ireland and Luxembourg - which host
many online businesses - worried that taxes would hurt their
competitiveness without a global solution.
"People moan that there is no European Google, that there is no European
Facebook, that there is no European LinkedIn, but my view is that if you
want those things in Europe and you want those types of companies to
generate in Europe it's not through heavy taxes and high regulation that
you achieve that," Irish leader Leo Varadkar told reporters, arriving at
the meeting in the EU's would-be "digital capital" of Tallinn in
Estonia.
Others, however, say the online multinationals do not pay enough tax in
the EU by re-routing profits to low-rate countries such as Ireland and
Luxembourg.
There needs to be a consensus among EU countries to implement tax
reform, though the European Commission has raised the possibility of
stripping members of their veto rights on tax issues, a move Ireland has
said it will resist.
'STRONG DRIVE'
French President Emmanuel Macron said "digital giants" should contribute
more to the infrastructure needed to ensure a smooth transition to a
digital economy, saying it was "absurd" that economic actors shaken and
sometimes weakened by the digital world should be the only ones
financing this transition.
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EU leaders pose for a family photo during the European Union Tallinn
Digital Summit in Tallinn, Estonia, September 29, 2017. REUTERS/Ints
Kalnins
"That is why ... I support the initiative taken by several finance ministers for
a tax on the value created in our countries. This tax will allow us to levy a
fair contribution to public goods by taxing the actors who are competing with
our European actors and who are today not taking part or not taking sufficient
part," he told a news conference.
Italian Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni said countries that supported the tax
reform not only could but "should" move ahead unilaterally.
However, a Spanish government official struck a more cautious note, saying an
EU-wide solution remained the best option and Ireland could be encouraged to
come on board.
"We will get there. There is a very strong drive," the official said. "We will
have to find a way to tax. Not to tax more but to tax the digital companies."
The official added a tax on turnover instead of profits could be implemented by
individual countries without even resorting to enhanced cooperation.
The Commission estimates the effective tax burden for digital companies is 10
percent, compared with the 23 percent for bricks-and-mortar companies.
Separately, a source in the French president's office said the Irish prime
minister would come to Paris at the end of October where the subject would be
raised.
In the longer term, the EU wants to change existing taxation rights to make sure
digital firms with large operations but no physical presence in a given country
pay taxes there instead of being allowed to reroute their profits to low-tax
jurisdictions.
The Commission has outlined three options for taxes aimed at internet companies
that could be agreed upon relatively quickly at the EU level or by a smaller
group of EU nations.
One is for a tax on the turnover rather than the profits of digital firms,
another would put a levy on online ads, and a third would impose a withholding
tax on payments to internet firms.
(Additional reporting by Marine Pennetier and Alissa De Carbonnel; Editing by
Mark Potter)
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