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EU Businesses Facebook The Almighty Buck United States Technology

Three European Countries Block Tax On Tech Giants (bloomberg.com) 56

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Bloomberg: French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire's efforts to rally his European Union colleagues around a new tax on tech giants fell short, as countries skeptical of the plan doubled down on their opposition, and others, including Italy, said they'll push ahead with their own plans. Ministers from Denmark, Ireland and Sweden said they couldn't support the tax in its current form, casting doubt on the proposal's future, since unanimity is required to pass taxes in the EU. The plan on the table would impose a 3 percent levy on the European sales of the likes of Amazon and Facebook. A number of countries are already imposing taxes of their own, increasing the risk of fragmentation in the single market. Finance Minister Giovanni Tria said an Italian tax will kick in next year if there's no broader agreement by then. Spain and the U.K. have already announced their own levies.
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Three European Countries Block Tax On Tech Giants

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  • by AHuxley ( 892839 ) on Tuesday November 06, 2018 @06:57PM (#57603186) Journal
    you can't tax something that can move out of the nation and out of the EU.
    Tax needs a captive product/service that has to stay in that nation.
    Low taxation is what attracted US brands to parts of the EU.
    When the EU places new tax the same US brands will just look for better tax rates globally.
    When the only attractive offer to stay in a nation was a low tax rate, don't remove the one thing keeping a brand in your nation.
    • by Hentes ( 2461350 ) on Tuesday November 06, 2018 @07:20PM (#57603302)

      There are two reasons tech companies won't move out of the EU. One is the educated workforce, and the other is the data that has to stay on EU soil.

      • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
        An educated workforce that needs a wage to keep working. When all the profits are lost to a new EU tax the value in the "educated workforce" is lost.
        Move to another advanced nation with better workers and a tax rate that welcomes investment and jobs.
        How much more tax are an average advanced nations "educated workforce" really worth?
        Some of the profits? Most of the profits? A total loss of all profit in that nation just to keep the "educated workforce" ?
        Would a company seeking low taxes to get the maxi
        • by aybiss ( 876862 )

          "all the profits are lost" :-D

          You really struggled with maths in school didn't you?

      • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
        Block sites and brands a person in the EU wants to use globally to ensure EU taxes get paid?
        Replace non EU services products with EU only services and then force all EU users to enjoy EU taxed services.
        The US brands offer a user account for "free".
        A EU service has to pay to protect the data in the EU and pay a EU service tax? Thats not "free".
      • You'd think that Europe of all places would know the stupidity of blood and soil arguments, and know that the only way to progress is globally. Tying people to the land is not only folly, it leads to genocide. Free movement of people and data is the only way forward in the 21st century.
      • But the main reason is tax avoidance.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      You can't move selling stuff to EU citizens to outside of the EU.

      Sure, you could have your headquarters on the Bahamas or something, but if you want to sell something you pay for that privilege either via import taxes or via taxes of your local branch.

      > When the only attractive offer to stay in a nation was a low tax rate, don't remove the one thing keeping a brand in your nation.

      Bullshit. The only reason you normally don't do that is because companies can then go somewhere else with lower taxes. Good l

      • by Cederic ( 9623 )

        I fear the person to whom you replied doesn't even understand the issue, and is thus entirely incapable of comprehending the implications of the European response to it.

        Hopefully your response will educate them.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Different small countries in Europe have always had to have different ways of making a living or find themselves feeder economies to the bigger countries. The EU has provided them with a fairer playing field or at least opportunities to take advantage of opportunities. The tech giants have exploited the entire world's inability to keep up with their fancy tax minimisation schemes. Some of the smaller countries have exploited the resulting anomalies as opportunities.
    France has long harboured the desire to

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