Italy to change web tax in bid to overcome US objections, minister says

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Rome: Italy has extended its domestic tax on digital services to small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) to try to overcome US objections that the levy is discriminatory, Economy Minister Giancarlo Giorgetti said on Thursday.

Addressing lawmakers on the government’s 2025 budget, Giorgetti said other European Union countries were likely to do the same to try to avoid retaliation.Washington has threatened tariffs over unilateral digital taxes in Europe, as they mainly target US tech companies such as Meta Platforms, Google, and Amazon.

Italy in 2019 introduced a 3.0 per cent levy on revenue from internet transactions for digital companies with annual sales of at least 750 million euros ($809 million) if at least 5.5 million are made in Italy.

Now, as part of the government’s 2025 budget, the Treasury plans to remove these minimum conditions, aiming to raise 51.6 million euros on top of the current revenue of 400 million.Confirming an earlier report, Giorgetti said that increasing the number of companies forced to pay the tax was aimed at avoiding clashes with Washington.

“This eliminates the ‘discrimination’ element underlying the US complaint,” Giorgetti said. “I think others will emulate us.”Sources said this week that the United States had renewed calls for Italy to repeal its web tax.

During Donald Trump’s first term as US president, Washington said it was prepared to counter the Italian levy.Now that Trump has won a second term, Italy’s web tax is likely to remain a sensitive issue for Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, an Italian government official said.

Complicating the matter, several lawmakers in Italy’s governing coalition oppose the Treasury’s proposed changes, arguing the tax should keep focusing on US Big Tech.They are planning amendments to the budget bill to maintain revenue floors while hiking the current 3.0 per cent tax rate.

“Such action could trigger retaliation from the US,” Giorgetti warned.Italy’s tax was due to be scrapped following approval of the first pillar of a global minimum tax aimed at reallocating taxation rights on about $200 billion of corporate profits to the countries where the companies involved do business. However, that international legislation has not come into force, having become bogged down by divisions between the United States, India and China.Giorgetti said the stalemate on the first pillar was unlikely to be overcome by the end of 2024 and called for a common EU approach over the matter.