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2015 Means EU Tax Increase On Cloud Storage, E-books and Smartphone Applications

schwit1 writes With the new year, a change in fiscal rules in the European Union is increasing the tax on many purchases of digital content like e-books and smartphone applications. Under the new rules, first approved in 2008, the tax rate on digital services like cloud storage and movie streaming will be determined by where consumers live, and not where the company selling the product has its European headquarters. Tax experts say Europe's revamped rules could add up to an extra $1 billion in annual tax revenue for European governments.

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  1. Re:This is nothing new for me. by Nemosoft+Unv. · · Score: 4, Informative

    Yes, there's some paperwork involved.

    Some? We have 35 different VAT regimes here... And VAT changes regularely. Try to integrate that into your webshop.

    The problem with this system is that it's backfiring. Yes, it is intended at the big companies who can pick a convenient country to pay taxes in. But it only hurts thousands and thousands of little mom-and-pop webshops who suddenly need to file extra paperwork, keep "2 reasonable proofs of location of the buyer" (Duh? Over the internet?) and must keep that information for 7 years (Hello! Security breach knocking at your front door!). So, to downloading a font, a game, or anything else purely digital, I now have to enter my address details into each and every shop. Why? It's a freaking download. Creditcard number should be enough.

    Then there are 2 additional problems:

    • Having to explain to your customers again and again that the price changes depending on which country they live in (which was not the case before) and yes, because you live in country X you pay more than a customer in country Y.
    • "Country hunters", people who will simply fill in bogus information to get the lowest price.
    --
    "Fix it? It has been disintegrated, by definition it cannot be fixed!" - Gru in Despicable Me.
  2. This is not the most important part of the change by j1976 · · Score: 5, Informative

    While the OP in principle is correct, the increased tax revenue is not the most important consequence of the change. The drastic part is the legal burden added on companies offering e-services. Any company (regardless of whether they are located in the EU or the US, regardless of their size, and regardless of their annual turnabout) that want to makes sales in the EU will now have to read and understand 28 different national tax laws regarding VAT. Not only do all these countries have different VAT rates, but they also have different exceptions depending on what it is that is sold. In one country the VAT rate might be 20%, unless the sale can be categorized for example as advertisement, in which case the VAT rate is 10%. In another country the item that is sold might be categorized in a different manner.

    The burden of figuring out what tax to charge lands entirely on the salesman, even if he's just a hobbyist selling a single item. Needless to say, learning and keeping track of 28 different legislations is impossible unless you are a large corporation. But despite this, a german shop owner charging the wrong VAT rate for a bulgarian customer might end up being sued in a bulgarian court of law. And in the long run get extradited to bulgaria. Since this law change in practice is going to wipe out small business owners, there have been quite vocal protests raised. For example a twitter storm ended up making the #EUVAT hashtag trending at number 3 worldwide. (see http://euvataction.org/2014/12...) More information about what the salient consequences of the law change are can be found at http://euvataction.org/key-fac....