Big tech unites with Trump over French tech tax

By Bloomberg | 19 Aug 2019 at 21:58hrs
Trump
The relationship between President Donald Trump and the largest U.S. technology companies has often been frosty but a common opponent - France's plan to tax U.S. tech giants - will bring the two sides together, at least temporarily.

Alphabet Inc.'s Google, Facebook Inc. and Amazon.com Inc. are all scheduled to testify in Washington on Monday in support of the Trump administration's efforts to potentially punish France for enacting a 3% tax on global tech companies with at least 750 million euros ($832 million) in global revenue and digital sales of 25 million euros in France.

France's digital tax "is a sharp departure from long-established tax rules and uniquely targets a subset of businesses," according to prepared remarks a Google representative is scheduled to deliver in the U.S. Trade Representative's Office hearing in Washington on Monday. "French government officials have emphasized repeatedly that the" tax is intended to target foreign technology companies.

The U.S. is probing France's new tax, which French President Emmanuel Macron signed into law last month, using a tool that could be a precursor to new tariffs or other trade restrictions. U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer could take action as soon as Aug. 26 when a comment period on the issue closes.
‘Radical Left'

The effort to crack down on France has created common ground for Trump — who has called Google and Facebook "on the side of the Radical Left Democrats" and accused Amazon of avoiding taxes — and technology companies that are both worried foreign governments are looking to use American corporations as a way to collect additional tax revenue.

The U.S. is looking to use France as an example to deter other countries from targeting American technology firms for tax dollars. The U.K., New Zealand, Spain and Italy are among countries considering their own digital taxes, a move that U.S. officials say could lead to companies being taxed multiple times on the same profits.

Trump has threatened to tax French wine or other goods in response to the digital tax. He tweeted last month "we will announce a substantial reciprocal action on Macron's foolishness shortly!" The so-called 301 investigation, which looks into unfair trade practices, is the same tool Trump used to slap tariffs on China over alleged intellectual-property theft.

The U.S. says countries considering their own version of a digital tax should focus on ongoing global talks with 130 countries on how to tax tech companies. Any future pact would likely create a whole new set of rules governing which countries have the right to tax the companies, which corporate profits are taxable, and how to resolve the inevitable disputes that would arise. A deal could be reached as soon as next year.

Opposition to France's tax is a rare area of bipartisan agreement in Congress. In a letter to Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin in June, Senators Chuck Grassley, an Iowa Republican, and Ron Wyden, an Oregon Democrat, urged the U.S. to look at "all available tools under U.S. law to address such targeted and discriminatory taxation."

The lawmakers included a suggestion to use a section of the tax code that would double the rate of U.S. taxes on French citizens and companies in the U.S.

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