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France Considers Raising Taxes on Internet Giants
lundi 4 mars 2019, 05:39 , par Slashdot
France's Finance Minister has drafted a new law to tax internet giants, reports Reuters:
A three percent tax on the French revenue of large internet companies could yield 500 million euros [$568 million U.S. dollars or £429 million] per year, French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said on Sunday. Le Maire told Le Parisien newspaper the tax is aimed at companies with worldwide digital revenue of at least 750 million and French revenue of more than 25 million euros. He said the tax would target some 30 companies, mostly American, but also Chinese, German, Spanish and British, as well as one French firm and several firms with French origins that have been bought by foreign companies. The paper listed Google, Amazon, Facebook and Apple (the four so-called 'GAFA' companies) but also Uber, Airbnb, Booking and French online advertising specialist Criteo as targets. 'A taxation system for the 21st century has to built on what has value today, and that is data,' Le Maire said. He added it is also a matter of fiscal justice, as the digital giants pay some 14 percentage points less tax than European small-and-medium sized companies. The draft law will be presented to the cabinet on Wednesday, and then presented to France's parliament, Reuters reports. 'The tax would also target the sales of personal data for advertising purposes.' Read more of this story at Slashdot.
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sam. 23 nov. - 00:25 CET
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