Paris (AFP)
- The EU will soon unveil a plan for taxing major internet companies like
Amazon and Facebook by imposing a levy of two to six percent on revenues in
every country where they operate, French finance minister Bruno Le Maire said
Sunday.
"The
range will be from two to six percent; but closer to two than to six," Le
Maire told the Journal du Dimanche newspaper.
The
European Commission has said it will present by end March an overhaul of its
tax rules, which currently allow US digital economy giants to report their
income from across the bloc in any member state.
That leads
them to pick low-tax nations like Ireland, the Netherlands or Luxembourg,
depriving other nations of their share of the revenue even though they may
account for more of a company's earnings.
"The
heads of these companies know themselves that this system can't continue,"
Le Maire said.
Critics say
the tax-avoidance strategies used by the tech titans known as GAFA -- Google,
Amazon, Facebook and Apple -- deprive EU governments of billions of euros while
giving them an unfair advantage over smaller rivals.
The
Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development says such strategies cost
governments around the world as much as $240 billion (195 billion euros) a year
in lost revenue, according to a 2015 estimate.
Asked if
the proposed rate might be criticised as too low, Le Maire said: "I would rather
have a law that can be implemented quickly instead of drawn-out
negotiations."
American
tech giants appear to believe the European tax revamp is in the cards, with
several already announcing pledges to pay more in each country where they
operate as governments step up their fiscal demands.
Amazon said
last month that it had settled a major tax claim in France and that it would
start declaring all its earnings in the country.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.