Hindustan Times (Delhi)

US launches probe into digital tax

- Yashwant Raj, Neeraj Chauhan and Rezaul H Laskar letters@hindustant­imes.com

IN APRIL, INDIA IMPOSED A NEW TAX OF 2% IN APRIL ON DIGITAL SERVICES RENDERED. THE LEVY IS EXPECTED TO AFFECT US GIANTS SUCH AS GOOGLE, FB

nWASHINGTO­N/NEWDELHI: The US on Tuesday started an investigat­ion into taxes on digital services in effect or being considered in other countries and their impact on American businesses, which could lead to retaliator­y trade actions and open up potentiall­y another front in India’s persisting trade difference­s with Washington.

The government imposed a new tax of 2% in April on digital services rendered in India against payments collected abroad. The levy is restricted to non-resident companies and is expected to chiefly affect American digital services giants Google, Facebook, Apple and Amazon. People familiar with developmen­ts said New Delhi has no plans to change its levy. “These investigat­ions are just the start of a process. It’s not as if some actions have already been taken by the US,” said one of the people. “Everything will depend on the findings of the investigat­ions. So, it’s too early to say.” Other countries that have levied this tax or are considerin­g them are Austria, Brazil, the Czech Republic, the European Union, Indonesia, Italy, Spain, Turkey, and the UK. Most of them are allies of the US.

“President Trump is concerned that many of our trading partners are adopting tax schemes designed to unfairly target our companies,” said Robert Lighthizer, the US trade representa­tive and America’s top trade negotiator, in a statement announcing the investigat­ion. “We are prepared to take all appropriat­e action to defend our businesses and workers against any such discrimina­tion.”

The investigat­ion has been launched under Section 301 of the Trade Act, 1974, the same provision that was used by the Trump administra­tion to slap an additional 25% tariff on $50 billion worth of imports from China in 2018, triggering a trade war between the world’s two largest economies.

Any potential action against India would add to a list of trade difference­s that the two countries have tried to reconcile despite pressure mounted in recent years by President Donald Trump through public and private exhortatio­n. Trump ended India’s special trade status last summer. Amit Maheshwari, a partner at AKM Global, a tax and consulting firm, said: “The US investigat­ion will focus on whether the digital services taxes (DSTS) discrimina­te against US companies, they are retroactiv­e, and they reflect unreasonab­le tax policy, which would be when the DSTS may diverge from norms reflected in the US tax system and the internatio­nal tax system in several respects such as extraterri­toriality, taxing revenue not income, and a purpose of penalising particular technology companies for their commercial success.”

“The Indian tax, which is the subject of this investigat­ion, was rushed in the recent Finance Act and made into law from April 1, 2020, without consultati­ons and gave little time for the industry to prepare. Several countries, including India, are adopting unilateral measures in the absence of multilater­al consensus spearheade­d by the Organisati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t . We don’t foresee global consensus anytime soon,” he added.

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