75
Fashion Jobs
L'OREAL GROUP
Demand & Supply Planner
Permanent · NEA IONIA
PROCTER & GAMBLE
Junior Brand Manager
Permanent · ATHENS
L'OREAL GROUP
E-Commerce Manager, l’Oréal Dermatological Beauty Division
Permanent · NEA IONIA
L'OREAL GROUP
Financial Controller - l’Oréal Dermatological Beauty Division
Permanent · NEA IONIA
L'OREAL GROUP
Key Account Supply Chain Manager
Permanent · NEA IONIA
L'OREAL GROUP
Social & Advocacy Manager – Consumer Products Division
Permanent · NEA IONIA
PROCTER&GAMBLE
Warehousing Purchasing Junior Manager
Permanent · ATHENS
L'OREAL GROUP
Sales Representative, Professionals Products Division
Permanent · NEA IONIA
L'OREAL GROUP
l'Oréal Partner Shop (Lps) Experience Manager, Professionals Products Division
Permanent · NEA IONIA
FOOT LOCKER
Συνεργάτης Πωλήσεων
Permanent · THESSALONIKI
RALPH LAUREN
Sales Associate
Permanent · THESSALONIKI
RALPH LAUREN
Sales Associate
Permanent · THESSALONIKI
COS
Σύμβουλος Πωλήσεων
Permanent · MAROUSI
PROCTER & GAMBLE
Brand Specialist
Permanent · ATHENS
GUESS
Part-Time Sales Advisor (Ermou Store)
Permanent · ATHENS
H&M
Σύμβουλος Πωλήσεων (Smart Park) - Μερική Απασχόληση
Permanent ·
L'OREAL GROUP
Beauty Advisor
Permanent · THESSALONIKI
MANGO
Πωλητεσ / Πωλητριεσ - sa
Fixed-term · ATHENS
SAINT LAURENT
Saint Laurent Stock Associate
Fixed-term · ATHENS
ZARA
Νεο Καταστημα Zara | Πειραιασ
Permanent · ATHENS
ZARA
Αλεξανδρουπολη | Part Time Πωλητεσ
Permanent · ALEXANDROUPOLI
STRADIVARIUS
Ρεθυμνο | Part Time Πωλητεσ
Permanent · RETHIMNO
By
Reuters API
Published
Mar 4, 2019
Reading time
2 minutes
Download
Download the article
Print
Text size

French tax on internet giants could yield 500 million euros per year

By
Reuters API
Published
Mar 4, 2019

A three percent tax on the French revenue of large internet companies could yield 500 million euros (430.6 million pounds) per year, French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said on Sunday.

Le Maire told Le Parisien newspaper the tax is aimed at companies with worldwide digital revenue of at least 750 million and French revenue of more than 25 million euros.


Amazon.com


He said the tax would target some 30 companies, mostly American, but also Chinese, German, Spanish and British, as well as one French firm and several firms with French origins that have been bought by foreign companies.

The paper listed Google, Amazon, Facebook and Apple (the four so-called "GAFA" companies) but also Uber, Airbnb, Booking and French online advertising specialist Criteo as targets.

"A taxation system for the 21st century has to built on what has value today, and that is data," Le Maire said.

He added it is also a matter of fiscal justice, as the digital giants pay some 14 percentage points less tax than European small-and-medium sized companies.
Fairer taxes are a key demand of the "yellow vest" protests seen across France in the past three months.

Le Maire said the tax would target platform companies that earn a commission on putting companies in touch with customers.

Companies selling their products on their own websites would not be targeted, such as French retailer Darty which sells TVs and washing machines via its website.

But companies such as Amazon earning money as a digital intermediary between a producer and a client would have to pay.

The tax would also target the sales of personal data for advertising purposes.
In order to avoid penalising companies who already pay taxes in France, the amount paid will be deductible from pretax income, Le Maire said.

He will present a draft law to the cabinet on Wednesday before it is presented to parliament.

France has led a push for firms with significant digital revenue in the European Union to pay more tax at source, but has made little headway as Germany is cool to the idea, while member states with low corporate tax rates such as Luxembourg and Ireland firmly oppose the proposal.

In an interview with weekly Journal du Dimanche, Carrefour CEO Alexandre Bompard said it is high time to end the fiscal imbalance between brick-and-mortar firms like his and the U.S. and Chinese internet platform companies.

"They pour their products onto markets without even paying value-added tax, and hardly any other tax at all, it is intolerable. On the same turnover they should pay the same tax," he said.

© Thomson Reuters 2024 All rights reserved.