Germany wants binding deal on EU digital tax at December meeting

Reuters  |  BERLIN 

(Reuters) - German said he favours getting a binding deal on a digital tax at a meeting of EU in December and that he supported the French model.

"If the negotiations continue the way that they have been going, we'll still be in talks in 100 years. That is why I support the French model and want to offer the proceeds to the EU," weekly quoted on Monday as saying.

There has been discord among member states over a proposed EU plan to tax big such as and on their turnover.

called this month for a revision of the plan that would exclude from the proposed tax activities linked to carmakers.

French said on Monday that an agreement was close to being struck.

Under a proposal from the EU's Commission in March, EU states would charge a 3 percent levy on the digital revenues of large firms that are accused of averting tax by routing their profits to the bloc's low-tax states.

The plan is aimed at changing tax rules that have let some of the world's biggest companies pay unusually low rates of corporate tax on their earnings.

But it requires the support of all 28 EU states and is opposed by a number of them, including small, low-tax countries like that have benefited by allowing multinationals to book profits there on digital sales to customers elsewhere.

Cooperation on taxes at the EU level exists in some areas, such as regulation on VAT, though setting taxes in principle remains the business of member states.

also said the EU should push ahead with minimum corporate tax rates and effective taxation of digital companies from January 2021 if states fail to reach an international agreement on tax avoidance. "We are in principle in agreement with our French friends on such a two-step strategy," he said.

(Reporting by with additional reporting by Tassilo Hummel; Editing by and Mark Heinrich)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, November 12 2018. 16:10 IST