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U.S. slaps French goods with 25% duties in digital tax row, but delays effective date

Published 07/10/2020, 05:33 PM
Updated 07/10/2020, 09:16 PM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: U.S. President Donald Trump speaks with Bahrain Crown Prince Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa

By Andrea Shalal

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The Trump administration on Friday announced additional duties of 25% on French cosmetics, handbags and other imports valued at $1.3 billion in response to France's digital services tax, but would hold off on implementing the move for up to 180 days.

The U.S. Trade Representative's office said delaying the start of the tariffs would allow further time to resolve the issue, including through discussions in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD). The decision also reflected France's agreement to defer collection of its 3% tax on digital services.

The U.S. move follows a U.S. Section 301 probe, which concluded the French tax discriminates against U.S. tech firms such as Google (O:GOOG), Facebook (O:FB) and Apple Inc (O:AAPL).

France and other countries view digital service taxes as a way to raise revenue from the local operations of big tech companies which they say profit enormously from local markets while making only limited contributions to public coffers.

U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer first disclosed on Thursday plans to impose new tariffs on French goods with deferred implementation. The $1.3 billion worth of goods is part of a list first published by USTR in December.

The United States has initiated similar Section 301 investigations of digital services taxes adopted or being considered by 10 other countries, including Britain, India and Turkey, which could result in tariffs against their goods.

OECD talks aimed at developing a multilateral solution for taxing digital services have failed to produce any results, with negotiations complicated by the coronavirus pandemic.

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Last month, U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin caught European countries by surprise when he suggested a pause in the OECD talks given the lack of progress there.

A spokesman for the European Union told Reuters earlier that Brussels could propose its own solution if the OECD talks failed to produce an agreement. He urged Washington to resume the talks.

 

Latest comments

i am European.. there should be no digital tax.. thank you Trump for fighting against it.. most taxes are theft.. europe should be thankful for US tech companies providing jobs in Europe and stop trying to steal from productive enterprises by inventing new taxes all the time.. i left my native Germany for the US when my first paycheck left me with 37% and 63% was taken by my goverment
And you've been scamming and defrauding people in America ever since.
Tax the h el l out of Europe!!!!
We won't sell you anything whit those fake dollars.
You call it digital tax not to admit that US tech companies frauded European states by not paying taxes and they took advantage of poor politics to do so for many years.
Many US tech (Apple, Google etc) companies are ironcally not US companies but Irish due to tax purposes
Meanwhile, the FED is propping them up...
Trump is a highly efficient machine. He cuts through the red tape and politics like no one I have ever seen before.
He's more like 'a bull in a china shop'.
No...you are just used to inefficiency and the USA being cowards. It is time someone is in office who actually gets things done, but if you are unhappy feel free to move out of this country.
Get them!
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