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US imposes 25% tariff on French goods worth $1.3bn in digital tax row but delays start date

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The US announced a tariff of 25 per cent on $1.3 billion (Dh4.77bn) worth of French goods in a long-running battle between the two countries over taxes on technology giants.

The Office of the US Trade Representa­tive said on Friday that it would again push back the collection of the levies by up to 180 days as France has yet to begin collecting its digital tax.

The Trump administra­tion said it would also grant more time to ongoing talks on a global deal at the Organisati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t.

Affected items include makeup, soap and handbags. However, items excluded from the US tariff list include French wine and cheese.

France held firm on its plans to resume collection of a national digital tax that hits technology giants including Amazon, Alphabet’s Google and Facebook, and said on Friday that it would not be swayed by threats of US sanctions.

“France’s response will be unchanged,” finance minister Bruno Le Maire said in Brussels. “If there is no internatio­nal solution by the end of 2020, we will, as we have always said, apply our national tax.”

The US withdrew last month from internatio­nal talks over a digital tax deal after failing to reach an agreement on developing a global levy.

The OECD has sought to help about 140 countries agree on how to address how multinatio­nals – particular­ly big technology companies – are taxed in the nations where they have users or consumers.

An internatio­nal deal would prevent dozens of countries from introducin­g their own versions of levies.

Several European countries – including Austria, France, Spain, Hungary, Italy, Turkey and the UK – announced plans for a digital services tax while many others held discussion­s on the matter. India expanded a levy that it already uses in April.

“We call on the US to return to the OECD negotiatio­ns on taxing digital giants,” Mr Le Maire said. “Sanctions are not a way of operating between countries that are friends, as the US and France are.”

The announceme­nt sent a clear signal to France and other countries considerin­g similar measures that there would be consequenc­es to singling out American technology companies, said Clete Willems, a partner at law firm Akin Gump.

Still, the tariff delay provided a valuable opportunit­y to solve this multilater­ally, he said.

“Both sides need to compromise,” he said. “France needs to back away from trying to tax digital companies before all global service providers and the US needs to stop insisting that the new rules be optional.”

US politician­s expressed their support for the tariffs shortly after the announceme­nt.

“Retaliator­y tariffs aren’t ideal but the French government’s refusal to back down from its unilateral imposition of unfair and punitive taxes on US companies leaves our government with no choice,” the top Republican, Chuck Grassley, and Democrat Ron Wyden on the Senate Finance Committee said.

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