The Borneo Post

France, US agree to extend talks over digital tax

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PRESIDENTS Emmanuel Macron and Donald Trump have agreed to extend till the end of the year negotiatio­ns on a dispute over a French tax targeting online giants, postponing Washington’s threat of sanctions, French officials said Tuesday.

French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire, speaking before a Brussels meeting with EU counterpar­ts, said: “Macron and Trump had a very constructi­ve discussion... and they agreed to avoid all escalation between the US and France on this digital tax issue”.

A French diplomatic source said the French and US leaders, who spoke by telephone on Sunday, agreed to give negotiatio­ns a chance to “find a solution in an internatio­nal framework” and avoid “a trade war that will benefit no one”.

Macron tweeted Monday that he had had a “great discussion” with Trump on the issue. “We will work together on a good agreement to avoid tariff escalation,” he said.

“Excellent!” replied Trump on Twitter.

The White House said the two men spoke and “agreed it is important to complete successful negotiatio­ns on the digital services tax, and they also discussed other bilateral issues”.

Trump said Tuesday that he was “very happy with the result”.

The dispute began last year when Paris approved a levy of up to three percent on revenues earned by tech companies in France, as internatio­nal efforts dragged on to find a new model for taxing revenues earned via online sales and advertisin­g.

Tech companies often pay little tax in countries in which they are not physically present.

Washington said the tax singled out US companies such as Google, Apple, Facebook, Amazon and Netflix. It threatened retaliator­y duties of up to 100 percent of the value of French imports of such emblematic goods as Champagne and Camembert cheese.

The European Union had said it would back France if such tariffs were levied, raising the prospect of a transatlan­tic trade war.

On January 7, Paris and Washington gave themselves 15 days to reach a deal to avert the US threat of duties on up to US$2.4 billion of French goods, which meant they should have reached a deal at Davos.

Le Maire, who has been conducting intensive negotiatio­ns for the last several weeks, had been scheduled to hold crunch talks on the issue with US counterpar­t Steven Mnuchin at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d on Wednesday.

“Since our two presidents spoke by phone the horizon has cleared up a bit, but it’s not a done deal until its done,” said Le Maire before heading to Davos.

Earlier in the day in Brussels he stressed that “this remains a difficult negotiatio­n.... A certain number of details need to be worked out, but I believe we’re going in the right direction”.

Le Maire declined, however, to say whether France would suspend its digital tax. “I am not going to get into the details of the negotiatio­n,” he said.

Neverthele­ss, according to concurring sources, France is willing to suspend the tax “to provide some time” to find a solution under the auspices of the Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? The US has threatened to impose ruinous duties on French imports of such emblematic goods as Champagne and Camembert cheese in the dispute over taxing tech giants.
— AFP photo The US has threatened to impose ruinous duties on French imports of such emblematic goods as Champagne and Camembert cheese in the dispute over taxing tech giants.

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