Washington – In a significant development last week, Canada and the United States reached an agreement that will result in Canada rescinding its discriminatory Digital Services Tax, which targeted mostly U.S. tech companies. The decision was announced hours before U.S. companies would have had to pay about $2.7 billion in retroactive taxes ahead of the June 30 deadline. Now other countries that enacted Digital Services Taxes are facing questions about whether those will impact trade relations with the U.S. as they negotiate tariffs with U.S. trade officials.
The Computer & Communications Industry has calculated that DSTs cost U.S. companies in countries like the U.K., France, Spain, and Italy over $9 billion from 2020-2024 alone, as calculated in findings released today. In February, President Trump signed an executive order directing the U.S. Trade Representative to explore resuming 301 investigations of these DSTs.
CCIA was active in providing calculations to the White House on the cost of Canada’s DSTs ahead of President Trump’s announcement which led to negotiations ending the taxes.
The following can be attributed to CCIA President & CEO Matt Schruers:
“Digital services taxes break long-standing tax norms and violate trade commitments. We are encouraged by the Administration’s response and the decisions of countries including India, Canada, and New Zealand, to abandon existing and proposed DSTs. CCIA research has demonstrated the impact of these foreign taxes on the U.S. tax base. We urge U.S. policymakers to use the tools at their disposal to discourage discriminatory taxes that are gerrymandered around extracting funds from U.S. businesses.”