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O.E.C.D. Unified Approach Garners Less Unified Comments from Europe’s Tech Producers and Users

Volume 7 No 1    /    Read Article

By Michael Peggs

How does a group of experts comment on the indescribable in order to arrive at a consensus? Inconsistently is the answer. As the O.E.C.D. continues its work on the taxation of the digital economy, the O.E.C.D. Centre for Tax Policy and Administration received comments in advance of a public consultation in late November 2019. The public consultation heard input from interested parties on the policy development aspects of a "Unified Approach" to the determination of tax nexus and profit allocation rules relevant to customer-facing corporate participants in the digital economy. From the consultation, a "great divide" appears to exist on the Unified Approach. The policy interests are clearly inconsistent when looking at (i) tech haves v. have-nots and (ii) consumers v. producers. The broadly North-South partition that caused the demise of the E.U. Commission’s significant digital presence and D.S.T. directives continues to be argued in the larger forum of the O.E.C.D. Tech haves and producers appear to share a common view with U.S. tech firms. Michael Peggs explains the divide in quantitative terms and suggests that, with the exception of the U.K., the adage that looks to see "whose ox is being gored" is a useful tool in identifying those jurisdictions that support digital taxes and others that are opposed.  See more →