TIME EUROPE June 19, 2000 VOL. 155 NO. 24
Brussels Decrees an E-VAT
The European Commission wants to tax content sold by foreign firms on the Web but can it?
By JAMES GRAFF Brussels
A Spanish fan downloads the latest Prince album from the artist's U.S.-based website. A Swedish schoolboy has his mother buy him a Japanese on-line PokŽmon game. An American expat in London orders personal finance software from the U.S. Where should the sales tax go? In most of the world today, the answer is "Nowhere." In Europe, however, Luxembourg may be the lucky recipient at least if the European Commission has its way.
Last week, the Commission issued a directive calling for value-added tax the consumption levy that provides 44% of the E.U.'s budget to be collected from non-E.U. firms that sell "Internet-based services" to anyone in the 15 member states. Under the proposal, a firm selling more than about $100,000 a year-worth of software, games, prepaid television or music for electronic delivery in the E.U. would be obliged to register with one of the 15 member states' tax authorities and levy VAT on all European online sales. Because Luxembourg has the lowest such tax in the E.U. 15% versus as much as 25% in Sweden and Denmark the Grand Duchy would be the obvious place to register, and would hence reap the tax revenues.
The new directive aims to create that most subjective of trade objectives, a level playing field. As matters now stand, Commission rules force E.U. companies that sell services online to charge VAT to their customers wherever they are, while non-E.U. firms do not. Brussels has been under pressure from member states and European content providers to correct that obvious flaw in the E.U.'s tax regime.
But the proposal might create as many problems as it solves. The plan brought swift criticism from its intended target, the U.S. Stuart Eizenstat, Deputy Secretary of the Treasury, voiced "serious concerns with both the substance and process" of the directive, arguing that "the unintended implications of the ... proposal are not worth the short-term tax revenues that may result." Ken Wasch, president of the Software and Information Industry Association, called it "fatally flawed" and "simply unenforceable."
According to Guido De Wit, VAT tax expert with the Brussels office of the law firm Linklaters and Alliance, the Commission proposal doesn't solve the fundamental problem of how you locate a consumer in a virtual world; the Commission's idea to use credit card billing addresses is likely to run afoul of credit card companies who want no part in releasing information for tax purposes. Nor is it at all clear how European tax authorities could audit the flow of international e-commerce, or sanction those that don't levy the tax.
The good news is that, Brussels being Brussels, it could have been worse. De Wit says it is a "big novelty" for the E.U. to take regulatory burdens into account, in this case by requiring vendors to register in only one E.U. state rather than all of them. But that won't make the proposal any more palatable to member states with high VAT rates. Their vendors will still have to charge more than American competitors that registered in Luxembourg or Germany, whose basic VAT rate is 16%.
The even better news is that, like all tax matters, the directive requires the unanimous approval of the member states, and is unlikely to survive unchanged through the legislative process. But at the very least, the Commission's proposal will go down as a first attempt to grasp the nettle of taxing an increasingly intangible economy. It won't be the last.
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June 19, 2000
SPECIAL REPORT
e-Europe TIME chronicles how the Old World is helping to shape the new economy
EUROPE
Voting under the Gun Municipal elections in Montenegro turn into a mini-referendum on the Yugoslav republic's future
Goal Rush Football fever grips Europe as the game's itinerant stars return home to shine on the national stage
Just Arrived Alongside the familiar faces, members of football's next generation will also display their skills at Euro 2000
The Empire Strikes Back Soccer violence continues to be England's ugliest export
BUSINESS
Turbulence Ahead The continuing controversy over Milan's Malpensa Airport clips the wings of state-run carrier Alitalia
Brussels Decrees An E-VAT The European Commission wants to tax content sold by foreign firms on the Web but can it?
THE ARTS
Shock of the Nouveau Streams of visitors to a new exhibition of sensual decorative art indicate that the form may be making one of its regular comebacks
DEPARTMENTS
Olympic Monitor
Techwatch
To Our Readers
World Watch
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