The Manila Times

WTO to table tax-free status of e-commerce

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Since late last century and the early days of the web, providers of digital media like Netflix and Spotify have had a free pass when it comes to internatio­nal taxes on films, video games and music that are shipped across borders through the internet.

As the World Trade Organizati­on opens its latest biannual meeting of government ministers on Monday, its longtime moratorium on duties on e-commerce products — which has been renewed almost automatica­lly since 1998 — is coming under pressure as never before.

This week in Abu Dhabi, the WTO’s 164 member countries will take up a number of key issues: Subsidies that encourage overfishin­g. Reforms to make agricultur­al markets fairer and more eco-friendly. And efforts to revive the Geneva-based trade body’s system of resolving disputes among countries.

All of those are tall orders, but the moratorium on e-commerce duties is perhaps the matter most in play. It centers on “electronic transmissi­ons” — music, movies, video games and the like — more than on physical goods. But the rulebook is not clear on the entire array of products affected.

“This is so important to millions of businesses, especially small- and medium-sized businesses,” WTO Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala said. “Some members believe that this should be extended and made permanent. Others believe ... there are reasons why it should not.”

“That’s why there’s been a debate and hopefully — because it touches on lives of many people — we hope that ministers would be able to make the appropriat­e decision,” she told reporters recently.

Under WTO’s rules, major decisions require consensus. The e-commerce moratorium cannot just sail through automatica­lly. Countries must actively vote in favor for the extension to take effect.

Four proposals are on the table: Two would extend the suspension of duties. Two — separately presented by South Africa and India, two countries that have been pushing their interests hard at the WTO — would not.

Proponents say the moratorium benefits consumers by helping keep costs down and promotes the wider rollout of digital services in countries both rich and poor.

Critics say it deprives debtburden­ed government­s in developing countries of tax revenue, though there is debate over just how much state coffers would stand to gain.

The WTO itself says that, on average, the potential loss would be less than one-third of 1 percent of total government revenue.

The stakes are high. A WTO report published in December said the value of “digitally delivered services” exports grew by more than 8 percent from 2005 to 2022 — higher than goods exports (5.6 percent) and other services exports (4.2 percent).

Growth has been uneven, though. Most developing countries don’t have digital networks as extensive as those in the rich world. Those countries see less need to extend the moratorium — and might reap needed tax revenue if it ends.

South Africa’s proposal, which seeks to end the moratorium, calls for the creation of a fund to receive voluntary contributi­ons to bridge the “digital divide.” It also wants to require “leading platforms” to boost the promotion of “historical­ly disadvanta­ged” smalland medium-sized enterprise­s.

Industry, at least in the United States, is pushing hard to extend the moratorium. In a February 13 letter to Biden administra­tion officials, nearly two dozen industry groups, including the Motion Picture Associatio­n, the US Chamber of Commerce and the Entertainm­ent Software Associatio­n — a videogame industry group — urged the United States to give its “full support” to a renewal.

“Accepting anything short of a multilater­al extension of the moratorium that applies to all WTO members would open the door to the introducti­on of new customs duties and related cross-border restrictio­ns that would hurt US workers in industries across the entire economy,” the letter said.

A collapse would deal a “major blow to the credibilit­y and durability” of the WTO and would mark the first time that its members “changed the rules to make it substantia­lly harder to conduct trade,” wrote the groups, which said their members include companies that combined employ over 100 million workers.

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