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Macron and Trump Declare Truce in Digital Tax Dispute (reuters.com) 52

French President Emmanuel Macron said on Monday he had a "great discussion" with U.S. President Donald Trump over a digital tax planned by Paris and said the two countries would work together to avoid a rise in tariffs. From a report: The two leaders agreed to the truce after Paris offered to suspend down payments for this year's digital tax and Washington promised to keep negotiating toward a solution rather than acting on a tariff threat, French sources said. Specifically, Macron and Trump agreed to hold off on a potential tariff war until the end of 2020, a French diplomatic source said, and to push ahead with broader negotiations at the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development to rewrite the rules of international taxation during that period. "They agreed to give a chance to negotiations until the end of the year," the source said. "During that time period, there won't be successive tariffs." France decided in July to apply a 3% levy on revenue from digital services earned in France by companies with revenues of more than 25 million euros ($28 million) in France and 750 million euros worldwide.
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Macron and Trump Declare Truce in Digital Tax Dispute

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  • A serious question (Score:4, Informative)

    by Okian Warrior ( 537106 ) on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @11:42AM (#59640750) Homepage Journal

    A serious question to the readership that majored in economics.

    I'd like to leave behind the fact that this is Trump (or Macron), and that the election is coming up - the implication being that Macron can simply wait a year and deal with someone else.

    In an academic sense only, people keep saying that trade wars are bad. I understand that point and have seen the analysis behind it.

    In this case it *appears* that France was thinking of raising tariffs, and the US was threatening to raise tariffs in response. As a summary explanation, it would seem that the US is trying to prevent a trade war, with the goal of lowering or eliminating tariffs. And in current economic theory, this is a good thing.

    Is that an accurate description of this situation?

    And further, leaving aside the particulars of Trump and China, it *appears* that China had already raised tariffs and made other trade policies that put US goods and services at a disadvantage, and that these policies had been in place for several years.

    In that case a summary description might say that China was already waging a trade war with the US and had done so for several years, and the US had finally begin to respond. In other words, the US did *not* start a trade war with China (MSM notwithstanding), but had only acted to stop the trade war.

    Is that also an accurate description?

    Again leaving the president out of it, it seems that the US is working towards mutually reducing tariffs with our trading partners, and that this should be good for every country involved. It's probably one of the roots of the current economic boom.

    So... what the US is doing is ultimately a good thing, both for the US and other trading partners.

    Economically speaking, this is what we should be doing... yes?

    • by fred6666 ( 4718031 ) on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @11:53AM (#59640790)

      In this case it *appears* that France was thinking of raising tariffs, and the US was threatening to raise tariffs in response. As a summary explanation, it would seem that the US is trying to prevent a trade war, with the goal of lowering or eliminating tariffs. And in current economic theory, this is a good thing.

      Is that an accurate description of this situation?

      No, it's not. France didn't want to raise any tariffs. Tarifs are taxes on imported goods at a border.
      France wanted to change its corporate tax structure. It would have applied equally to both domestic and foreign corporations and didn't target the USA in particular.

      On the other hand, Trump threatened to start a trade war, by raising tariffs on some French goods, to make them less attractive than goods coming from the USA or elsewhere.

      • by Errol backfiring ( 1280012 ) on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @12:04PM (#59640834) Journal
        Correct. This is more about tax avoidance in the EU than about import tariffs. When "cyber" companies finally have to pay taxes like any other company, your orange man steps in to threaten with a trade war.
      • by swillden ( 191260 ) <shawn-ds@willden.org> on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @12:52PM (#59641060) Journal

        France wanted to change its corporate tax structure. It would have applied equally to both domestic and foreign corporations and didn't target the USA in particular.

        This is a bit disingenuous. What you say is technically true, but everyone involved knew that the big US tech companies were the only ones who'd pay any significant amount, and the tax was specifically designed to tax them.

        There's an argument that this is fair, given the fact that the structure of international tax law allows foreign companies whose primary business is purely IP-based to legally avoid paying much tax. But it's misleading to argue that this was just a domestic tax policy change, because it was specifically targeted at the US tech giants.

        • by fred6666 ( 4718031 ) on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @02:25PM (#59641420)

          It was specifically target against tax avoiders. That a lot of them happens to be based in the USA (although it doesn't mean much since they usually bill from offshore, low tax jurisdictions) is a side effect. The tax itself didn't target any country in particular.

          • It was specifically target against tax avoiders. That a lot of them happens to be based in the USA (although it doesn't mean much since they usually bill from offshore, low tax jurisdictions) is a side effect. The tax itself didn't target any country in particular.

            One very, very specific type of tax avoider... which really only fits the US tech giants.

    • Yeah but, orang man bad.
    • Comment removed (Score:5, Informative)

      by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @12:06PM (#59640844)
      Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Great explanation. Thanks!

        I wish slashdot could have more of these realistic, rational explanations.

        Especially since most of the news these days seems to be clickbait intended to generate reader outrage against a target of the writer's choice.

      • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @12:48PM (#59641032)

        That's a completely normal tax, it's neutral on the origin of the products being sold.

        Except it's not really at all, because the reality is that it would exclusively effect U.S. companies.

        Now if they hadn't put the revenue floor in, so that it affected all companies equally - then you could argue it was "just a tax". But the way it was structured, how would the end effect differ from a tariff for the (almost exclusively U.S.) companies involved? It would not.

        this is not a salvo by France in a "trade war"

        It was absolutely an attempt to soak American companies. A trade war by any other name...

        • by fred6666 ( 4718031 ) on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @02:27PM (#59641432)

          That's a completely normal tax, it's neutral on the origin of the products being sold.

          Except it's not really at all, because the reality is that it would exclusively effect U.S. companies.

          No it wouldn't. But even if it did, the tax would still be perfectly OK and neutral. Just because tax avoiders happen to be based in the US shouldn't mean the tax code shouldn't be fixed.

        • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @03:40PM (#59641754)

          Except it's not really at all, because the reality is that it would exclusively effect U.S. companies.

          Except it doesn't. You just think that because you are under some incredible delusion that only a US company can make 750million EUR in global revenue. The reality is (since we're talking about revenue) that this tax would have affected many thousands of companies doing business in France, and only a portion of them are USA based, and I bet you can't even name more than 3.

          Now if they hadn't put the revenue floor in, so that it affected all companies equally - then you could argue it was "just a tax".

          Nearly every tax in the world has some kind of revenue floor. This is "just a tax" in the most literal sense your lack of understanding of global business notwithstanding.

      • by swillden ( 191260 ) <shawn-ds@willden.org> on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @01:23PM (#59641174) Journal

        That's a completely normal tax, it's neutral on the origin of the products being sold.

        Sort of. Not really.

        It's at the very least an unusual and novel tax. Taxing revenue is very uncommon, because governments -- rightly -- don't want to penalize low-margin industries or unfairly advantage high-margin industries. The size clause is also a little unusual; it's common to exempt small business from regulations but not so much from taxes, and the numbers in this case limit the targets to fairly large companies.

        The worst anyone could argue is that there aren't really many French companies this applies to compared to the large number of non-French companies

        No, the worst anyone could argue -- and they'd have a very legitimate argument, given the unusual and narrowly-focused nature of the tax -- is that it was specifically designed to target US tech giants.

        Leaving aside questions of whether it's a good idea in general, no, this is not a salvo by France in a "trade war".

        Agreed. There's no indication that France planned any other tariffs or taxes, nor that they were trying to use this tax as leverage to pry something else loose, or any of the other reasons countries engage in trade wars.

        Had the US decided to punish France for it, the US would have been entirely in the wrong

        That would depend on the punishment. If the US decided to make additional taxes designed to primarily affect French companies, without actually specifying national origin, that would have been simple turnabout.

        • Agreed. There's no indication that France planned any other tariffs or taxes, nor that they were trying to use this tax as leverage to pry something else loose,

          Maybe, but there is the very real example that dropping this tax was used to offset potential U.S. tariffs...

    • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @12:56PM (#59641076)
      A Tariff is a tax on yourself that you use to artificially raise the price of imports in order to make your locally sourced products more desirable.

      First for Tariffs to work there has to be an industry to protect. We shipped most manufacturing overseas and what we didn't ship we automated.

      Moreover we'd need a practical way to protect our industries. It's too cheap to move factories in 2019. Trump's tariffs were mostly useless as a job creation tool. All it did was move manufacturing to Vietnam & Mexico.

      So to answer your question, no, the Tariffs didn't help. The fact that we backed down so quickly is fairly good proof of it. There's a fair amount [marketwatch.com] online to back this up [thehill.com]

      What this means is that at this stage if we want a manufacturing jobs renaissance in the States we're gonna have to do what China does: Federal Jobs programs. That's what the "Green New Deal" is about. The 10 million jobs aren't from hand outs to companies, they're by and large government jobs. The ones that aren't are quasi-gov't jobs like what Ratheon does.

      Once you've built an industry then you can use tariffs to protect it. You should also use import bans from countries that refuse to treat workers with dignity and respect. Of course that goes for America too [theguardian.com]
      • It's too cheap to move factories in 2019. Trump's tariffs were mostly useless as a job creation tool. All it did was move manufacturing to Vietnam & Mexico.

        Worse than that, it moved *assembly* plants from China to Vietnam and Mexico. The parts are still being manufactured in China and just shipped to Vietnam and Mexico for final assembly.

    • Trump prevented the imposition of taxes that would have fallen mostly on American based companies. Last time I looked, I was not in favor of taxes, or big government. Government itself does little for the average person: It produces nothing, other than regulation, pensions and benefits for those involved. We need one for defense and keeping public order. Social Security and Medicare are ok, but should be better funded. Other than that, defense, and necessary public services, such as water utilities,
    • No, your summary makes it sound like Trump won yet another trade negotiation and thus will rebound from the ears of TDS sufferers. Expect lots of convoluted explanations as to why this was really a bad thing or was really all Trump's fault...

    • I saw many replies to your question that answered both positive and negative to it being a tariff. But I think they all missed an important bit of information. Companies operating solely in France have to pay taxes on their profit. These large, and mainly US companies, have used legal but dubious loopholes to avoid tax, including moving profit to fake costs and claiming profit in lower taxed countries for this money that they actually generated in France. It's not a tariff because French companies already h
  • by fred6666 ( 4718031 ) on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @11:44AM (#59640754)

    Because the current tax scheme is broken in the digital age.

    At the bare minimum, all digital services (ads, streaming, downloads, licenses, and more) should be taxed according to the credit card's owner's address jurisdiction. It means that any sale tax / VAT should apply, otherwise it's unfair and local businesses can't compete (even by providing the exact same service online).

    • Yeah, how can the local mom-and-pop neighborhood streaming services compete with Netflix? Lets an a tax to fix it.

      • By local I didn't mean mom-and-pop.

        In Canada there are quite a few "local" streaming services trying to compete with Netflix. Crave TV, Club Illico, Tou.TV, and probably more. They all get taxed both at the federal and provincial levels (which means they have to charge an extra 5-15% compared to Netflix). And I am not talking about corporate profit tax here, which they also probably pay more than Netflix, I am only talking about sale tax.

        It's not adding a new tax, it's applying the current tax fairly. Not r

    • You are absolutely correct. It's not just about the money that is being siphoned out of our local economies by the likes of Amazon, Facebook, Apple, Alphabet etc. it's also the fact that they are not paying their fare share of taxes. We are only seeing the tip of the iceberg if this is not corrected soon, we need to remove money from politics so that politicians make choices for us, not the the money.
    • by LubosD ( 909058 )
      That is absolutely ridiculous.

      It means that if I start selling licenses for my software online, I as the seller should NOT declare my (or my company's) income in my country of residence, but should rather declare it in all 195 countries of the world?

      • No. I was talking about sale tax, not income tax.

        There could also be a minimum. In my jurisdiction, you don't need to charge sale tax if you don't sell for at least $30k/year.

        • by LubosD ( 909058 )
          That's not a big difference. So, as a European developer, if I sell (or want to sell) a software license to someone who lives in the USA, I should suddenly need a US-based accountant to sort out the sales tax? (And once again, imagine doing this for all countries in the world.)
          • One way or another, yes. If you are selling through Google Play store, Google could collect the taxes for you.
            Also, sale taxes are quite simple. You shouldn't need an accountant to calculate how much is 7% of $100.

            But if you are selling for less than $30k in a jurisdiction then you could be exempt. So in the end you might have only a few jurisdictions to care about.
            If you are selling for over $30k in 195 countries then you can afford an accountant anyways.

            But just like if you shipped a CD version of your so

            • by LubosD ( 909058 )
              Now that you've realized the whole tax thing isn't that straightforward (by adding a $30k limit, which would be difficult to enforce, because country XYZ cannot know how many licenses I sold to their citizens), you could come up with an idea, how those 195-1 countries plan on forcing me to collect, declare and pay those taxes, because I am only really subject to the laws of the country I live in (anything else would be ridiculous - imagine being subject to North Korean Internet laws).

              And how to do that wi

              • by fred6666 ( 4718031 ) on Tuesday January 21, 2020 @02:33PM (#59641458)

                There are various ways to achieve it. Most involve some sort of cooperation between countries.
                But the EU and Australia successfully forced Netflix to collect sale taxes. Canada is supposed to be about to do it next. So it's possible.

                The first step is to write it clear in the law that corporations such as Netflix (which obviously makes more than $30k in Canada, there is no point in trying to deny it) must collect sale taxes.
                After that, it means if you are not doing it, you are illegal in that country. Now, you can try dodging it all you want, but don't ever step foot in that country, and don't complain if one day your payments are blocked. If you are an ebay seller in China selling from you mom's basement, chances are you won't get cut as long as you remain low profile. It's not an excuse for not trying to collect taxes fairly.

          • Another option would be to force Visa/Mastercard to collect sale taxes without you even knowing it.

      • There is an analog for this in the US tax system.

        US citizens have to pay taxes on foreign-earned income, even if they don't live in the US.

    • by vyvepe ( 809573 )

      At the bare minimum, all digital services (ads, streaming, downloads, licenses, and more) should be taxed according to the credit card's owner's address jurisdiction.

      VAT already does that. It is collected at the location of consumption.

      • by LubosD ( 909058 )
        Only if the company voluntarily sells the product via a local branch. (With a special EU member state exception, where if you're selling services from state A and your yearly turnover to customers in state B exceeds a certain threshold, you need to start applying a local VAT in state B instead of state A's VAT.)

        If an American company sells services to me as an EU citizen without a European branch office involved, then there is no VAT applied. Simply because that American-only company is not subject to EU

      • VAT doesn't do that at all. VAT, like all other sale taxes, is only applied to company respecting local rules. Usually it doesn't include foreign corporations.
        The EU is a notable exception, as they cooperate on VAT collection, but non-EU businesses selling digital services to a customer in the EU usually do not collect VAT.

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