Google Tax or Equalisation Levy in
Budget 2020 Invites Retaliation - US
Proposes Retaliatory Tariffs of up to 25% on Select Indian Goods
In its first retaliatory action
under the Joe Biden
administration, the US has proposed to impose retaliatory tariffs up to 25% on
around 40 Indian products including shrimps, basmati rice, gold and silver
items in response to the equalisation levy
or digital services tax (DST) imposed by India on non-resident e-commerce
operators.
The United States Trade
Representative (USTR)
on Thursday said this would collect duties on goods of India in the range of
the amount of DST that India is expected to collect
from US whose initial estimates are pegged at $55 million per year.
“In particular, USTR proposes to
impose additional tariffs of up to 25% ad valorem on an aggregate level of
trade that would collect duties on goods of India in the range of the amount of
DST that India is expected to collect from US companies,” it said in a report
on Next Steps of 301 Digital Services Taxes Investigations.
It proposed similar actions for five
other countries- Austria, Italy, Spain, Turkey, and the United Kingdom.
“Initial estimates indicate that the
value of the DST payable by US- based company groups to India will be up to
approximately $55 million per year,” USTR said in its report on India.
In January, USTR said that the DSTs
adopted by Austria, India, Italy, Spain, Turkey, and the United Kingdom were
subject to action under Section 301 because they discriminated against US
digital companies, were inconsistent with principles of international taxation,
and burdened American companies.
The 2% equalisation
levy, or the so-called Google tax, came into effect on April 1, 2020. The USTR
has identified 119 companies that are likely to be liable under the Digital
Service Tax, out of which 86, or 72%, are American companies.
New Delhi had, in November last
year, argued that the levy was one of the methods suggested by the 2015
OECD-G20 report of Base Erosion and Profit Shifting Project, aimed at tackling
the taxation challenges arising from digitisation of
the economy. The levy has a threshold of Rs 2 crore.
“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,” said USTR Katherine Tai on the retaliatory measures
proposed.
Other items in the initial list of
targeted products from India include bamboo products, wood furniture, cigarette
paper, cultured pearls, precious or semi-precious stones, jewellery,
corks, token operated games for arcade and brassieres.
The USTR said it has decided to
convene virtual public hearings and accept rebuttal comments in relation to the
potential action from affected parties in May 2021.