Large digital companies such as Google, Apple, and Amazon have been able to use existing rules to reduce taxes in some countries for many years, which has greatly irritated the governments of other countries.
In a report authored by the Group of 20 (G20), the OECD stated that countries have agreed to review the increasingly outdated international taxation of the digital economy.
The report will be announced at the meeting of G20 finance ministers in Buenos Aires from March 19th to 20th. The report acknowledges that their series of positions need to communicate with some countries because these countries They don't think they need to change anything.
The core of this question is about how to constitute a company's full-fledged rules in a country, and how to distribute profits on the borders of multinational groups.
In the absence of international solutions, some countries, such as India, Australia, and other European countries, have begun to come forward to fill the loopholes.
According to a draft proposal from Reuters, under pressure from France and Germany, the European Commission will propose next week that large companies with large digital revenues in the EU will face a 3% turnover. Turnover tax.
After French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire met with the German Finance Minister in Paris, he was giving political priority to more taxes collected from digital companies. He described the report of the OECD as ' Positive and important step'.