ARTICLE
1 June 2020

Unilateralism In Digital Tax And Trade - A Self-Interested Race To The Bottom

H
Hassans

Contributor

Full service law firm established in 1939 with 46 partners, 50 other lawyers and 250 staff in total across two offices in Gibraltar and Sotogrande, Spain. Hassans are trusted advisers to clients both locally and overseas, who seek legal guidance in a fast-moving, multi-jurisdictional world. We aim to solve our clients problems with specialist tax advice, litigation, funds, FinTech, corporate and commercial, private client, financial services and trust solutions. Many of our assignments are cross-border and we have considerable knowledge of other key jurisdictions.

Like the late 19th and early 20th Century Scramble for Africa, the unilateral scramble for digital tax revenues by jurisdictions
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Like the late 19th and early 20th Century Scramble for Africa, the unilateral scramble for digital tax revenues by jurisdictions (including as an arguably intuitive response to the immediate economic pressures of the Covid-19 fallout) poses a dangerous threat to international trade.

Whilst our primitive urges (perhaps awakened and heightened by the severity of the situation at hand) may re-actively drive us to seek ways of securing our own positions, as the below article submits, with the potential of digital tax measures spilling over into a wider digital trade war (with countries potentially then seeking to tariff e-commerce more generally) this could spark a cross-border tit-for-tat (that may even include non-digital trade) which could wreak havoc on the global economy.

Concerted, coordinated efforts must find a way to prevail, despite the additional challenges posed by social-distancing that the OECD must additionally face in order to meet their end of 2020 timeline (for the general negotiation of new digital taxation proposals) with a view to staving off the chaos that may otherwise ensue.

Originally published Hassans, May 2020

www.gibraltarlaw.com

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.

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