OECD takes aim at tech giants with global tax plan

The international tax negotiations are an important bargaining chip in a dispute that is mixed with trade issues.

OECD Angel Gurria
The OECD proposed a "unified approach" to countries haggling over how to allocate taxing rights [File: Hannibal Hanschke/Reuters]

The world’s richest countries began examining a compromise on how to tax multinational companies in a digitalized global economy, potentially calming tensions that have sparked tit-for-tat unilateral moves.

The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development proposed a “unified approach” to countries haggling over how to allocate taxing rights. It merges competing proposals that had divided countries, with some wanting to single out digital companies and others aiming at a broader target.

Progress in the international tax negotiations is being closely watched as it has become an important bargaining chip in a dispute that is mixing with trade issues.

The tensions bubbled over in July when the U.S. responded to a French digital tax by launching a so-called 301 investigation that could result in tariffs.

The U.S. says France’s move unfairly targets American companies, but the French government says it will stick with the tax unless there is a global solution at the OECD.

The compromise put forward Wednesday is just one element in a negotiation that Group of 20 economies say they aim to conclude by the end of 2020. To meet that, the OECD said there’ll need to be agreement on its unified approach by January.

“Failure to reach agreement by 2020 would greatly increase the risk that countries will act unilaterally, with negative consequences on an already fragile global economy. We must not allow that to happen,” said OECD Secretary General Angel Gurria.

Negotiations hosted by the OECD have at times been bogged down by disagreements about how to approach the question of digital tax.

The OECD said its compromise proposal has a wide scope that covers “highly digitalized business models.” It also proposes new rules on where tax should be paid that depend less on the physical location, and what portion of profits should be taxed.

Source: Bloomberg