The Daily Telegraph

Innovation will pay the price of a digital tax

- James Wise

Last week’s move by Chancellor Philip Hammond to introduce a new tax on the revenues of digital businesses was a logical consequenc­e of the year’s prevailing view that some technology companies aren’t paying their fair share.

Hammond plans to impose a 2pc tax on the revenues of Google, Amazon, Facebook and other companies with global revenues of at least £500m, in what he hopes will be an initiative followed by other nations.

Seizing the thorny issue of multinatio­nal taxation isn’t easy, and the Chancellor should be applauded for taking a lead while the EU and OECD still continue to discuss it. But targeting the technology industry so bluntly, and at a time when the UK’S own software industry is seeing such strong momentum, could result in this tech tax ending up as a tax on British innovation.

The UK should be putting greater effort into revising tax codes and leading the way in creating positive regulation of these new business models, not treating them like the oil barons of yesteryear.

Our post-war tax system was developed in a world of big industry, car manufactur­ing and steel works. Companies had to have a significan­t physical presence in a country to generate sales there. Yet as more of the UK economy has been driven by services and now software, a corporatio­n tax based on where profits are generated is becoming as relevant as the abacus they were initially calculated on. Where exactly in the UK is revenue generated when a French company pays for advertisin­g to be shown to a British user who sees it through a mobile connection delivered via a web server in California? Working that out alone is going to be a multimilli­on-pound headache for HMRC.

That tax laws are out of date is news to no one, and as Margaret Hodge MP rightly pointed out in 2012, tech companies aren’t being accused of something illegal but rather immoral.

But the technology companies identified by the Chancellor are hardly alone in this approach to taxation. Why have a special tax for Spotify or Booking.com, which are hugely popular services in a fiercely competitiv­e market, and not for internatio­nal pharmaceut­ical companies and offshore funds?

The advantages companies like Amazon have over UK retailers like Tesco isn’t their profit margins but the user experience.

Shoppers are voting with their feet, or rather their clicks, whatever their budget. All a tax will do is raise prices for consumers, not protect the corner shop.

If anything the rise of new platforms like Instagram, Amazon and Google has unleashed a new generation of entreprene­urs, giving them access to customers at a fraction of the cost they would have to bear a decade ago.

The broader message that technology companies will be treated differentl­y is a dangerous one to send at a time when the UK is finally beginning to compete on a global scale, producing tech companies like Zoopla, Revolut and Farfetch, with a worldwide presence.

The UK has long been criticised as a society where risk taking is chastised compared to the US.

If we focus too much on the negatives on these new tech platforms, we risk alienating a new generation of entreprene­urs just as the UK is seeing breakthrou­ghs on a global stage.

There are many other useful ways in which Britain can exert leadership in the tech sector. By requiring stronger rights for workers in the gig economy, we could ensure companies like Uber and Deliveroo provide meaningful work and great service.

By demanding that Google and Apple make the data they capture on UK users more transparen­t, we could improve people’s understand­ing of the apps they use. By working with Amazon and Facebook to take on apprentice­s we could increase the number and quality of the next generation of British engineers.

Gerrymande­ring new business models into outmoded tax law is doomed to fail.

‘All a tax will do is raise prices for consumers, not protect the small corner shop’

James Wise is a partner at Balderton Capital, one of the biggest tech investors in the UK

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