Italy passed a digital tax this week that’s similar to the one France implemented earlier this year.
Dozens of countries are working on proposals to change corporate tax schemes to capture money from technology companies that have users across the world, such as Facebook and Alphabet, Google’s parent company.
The United States has engaged through the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD ), a think tank of rich economies, but Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said in a recent letter to the organization that there were concerns about a proposal being pushed by some countries.
For a multilateral agreement to be effective, Mnuchin added, “it will need to be implemented through amendments to tax treaties and/or through domestic legislation, which in turn will require broad support.”
He said the United States was urging all countries “to suspend digital tax initiatives” as the organization worked to reach an agreement.
“It’s choppy waters. It’s difficult,” Pascal Saint-Amans, the senior OECD official leading the negotiations, said during a panel in Washington last week, reported the Journal.
“The first feedback we’ve had (is) that optionality may not be welcome, but it’s the U.S. position and no one can ignore the U.S. position,” he said.
France’s tax earlier this year sparked condemnation from President Donald Trump’s administration, which said in early December it was considering tariffs of up to 100 percent on wine, cheese, and handbags from France.
The Trump administration said tariffs could be put into place against Italy in light of the new tax.
France’s digital services tax “discriminates against U.S. companies, is inconsistent with prevailing principles of international tax policy, and is unusually burdensome for affected U.S. companies,” U.S. Trade Representative (USTR) Robert Lighthizer said on Dec. 2.
The tax discriminated against American tech companies like Google, Apple, Facebook, and Amazon, he said.