The UK government's long awaited tax relief for the video games sector has stalled as the European Commission questions whether state aid in this sector is necessary.

The proposed relief for this sector, which sits alongside the proposed legislation for high-end television programmes and animation productions, was introduced by the Government in the Finance Bill 2013 and is modelled on the existing relief for film. In order to satisfy EU requirements, the reliefs already incorporate a strict cultural content and contribution test to ensure that only products that are "culturally British" qualify.

However, while the proposed reliefs for high-end television and animation productions received state aid approval by the Commission on 25 March 2013 and were therefore effective from 1 April 2013, the Commission said on 16 April 2013 that it considers that there is no obvious market failure in the video games sector and that games fitting the cultural criteria are already being developed with no need for state aid. The Commission is also concerned to avoid a subsidy race between countries in the European Union. As a result, the Commission has opened an in-depth investigation, which can typically take around a year. In the meantime, on 22 April 2013, the UK Government published revised draft regulations setting out the cultural tests which address some of the Commission's concerns.

It is worth noting that in 2006 the Commission initially rejected a similar scheme by France, but then approved it after France modified the French "cultural content" test.

http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_IP-13-333_en.htm

(This article is to be published later this month in Bristow's regular EU update column featured in [2013] 29 Computer Law and Security Review Issue 3.)

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