OECD To Move On Internet Taxation
by Caroline Maxwell, Tax-News.com, London
23 October 2001
In its latest attempt to
address the thorny issue of internet taxation, the OECD's Tax Advisory Group
has recommended that websites be excluded from the tax nets of member countries.
If the proposed 2002 model
tax code is adopted next year by the multilateral organization's 30 member countries,
websites will not be considered as permanent establishments for the purposes
of levying taxes on foreign enterprises. Web servers, however, will constitute
a permanent establishment in the country in which they are located, and will
therefore oblige their owner to pay taxes in that country under the planned
legislation.
However, if the server is
not considered a fully-fledged facility of the business, and is not used exclusively
by it, it will not constitute a permanent establishment, and will therefore
not incur tax liability.
OECD officials seem
confident that these new proposals mark a satisfactory compromise in the long
running dispute over how to legislate and implement internet
taxation, and say that the recommendations are likely to be accepted by the
30 member countries by 2002. It's not clear how they square this statement with the UK's oft-repeated insistence that it will not treat a server, on its own, as a permanent establishment under any circumstances.
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