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US proceeding with Digital Services Tax probe against 6 countries, including India

Probe following claims that DST adoption discriminated against the US digital firms

INDIA USA

The US has announced that it is proceeding with the next steps of Digital Services Tax investigations against Austria, India, Italy, Spain, Turkey and the UK that can lead to trade actions against the six trading partners of the country.

In January, the US Trade Representative (USTR) found that the DSTs adopted by Austria, India, Italy, Spain, Turkey, and the United Kingdom were subject to action under Section 301 of the US Trade Act because they discriminated against the US digital companies, were inconsistent with principles of international taxation and burdened the US companies.

The USTR on Friday said it is proceeding with the public notice and comment process on possible trade actions to preserve procedural options before the conclusion of the statutory one-year time period for completing the investigations.

The United States is committed to working with its trading partners to resolve its concerns with digital services taxes, and to addressing broader issues of international taxation, said US Trade Representative Katherine Tai.

The United States remains committed to reaching an international consensus through the OECD process on international tax issues. However, until such a consensus is reached, we will maintain our options under the Section 301 process, including, if necessary, the imposition of tariffs, she said.

The remaining four jurisdictions—Brazil, the Czech Republic, the European Union, and Indonesia—have not adopted or not implemented the DSTs under consideration when the investigations were initiated. Accordingly, the USTR is terminating these four investigations without further proceedings.

If any of these jurisdictions proceed to adopt or implement a DST, the USTR may initiate new investigations, the US warned.

The previous Trump administration on June 2 last year had initiated investigations into DSTs adopted or under consideration in 10 jurisdictions—Austria, Brazil, the Czech Republic, the European Union, India, Indonesia, Italy, Spain, Turkey, and the United Kingdom.

Following comprehensive investigations, including consultations with the countries subject to investigation and consideration of public comments, the USTR in January 2021 issued reports on DSTs adopted by Austria, India, Italy, Spain, Turkey and the United Kingdom.

India had adopted the operative form of its Digital Services Tax or DST on March 27, 2020.

The DST imposes a two per cent tax on revenue generated from a broad range of digital services offered in India, including digital platform services, digital content sales, digital sales of a company's own goods, data-related services, software-as-a-service, and several other categories of digital services.

The US move came a day after the two countries agreed to work constructively to resolve key outstanding bilateral trade issues and to take a comprehensive look at ways to expand the trade relationship.

United States Trade Representative Tai discussed the important trade and investment relationship between the two countries during her maiden phone call with her Indian counterpart Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal.

They committed to strengthening cooperation on shared objectives and to revitalise engagement through the US-India Trade Policy Forum. They also agreed to work constructively to resolve key outstanding bilateral trade issues and to take a comprehensive look at ways to expand the trade relationship, the USTR said in a readout of the call on Thursday.

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