A row over taxing tech giants is set to dominate a meeting of G7 finance ministers near Paris this week, with the world’s leading industrialised nations already riven by disruptive US trade policies.
During the meetings on Wednesday and Thursday in Chantilly, ministers are set to discuss making taxation fairer as part of wider plans by G7 leaders to address rising inequality when they gather next month in the southern French city of Biarritz.
An international effort to update rules so as to rein in multinationals gaming the system by paying in low-tax rate countries has been plodding along.
But France and Britain gave the process a jolt last week when they moved forward with plans to apply sales taxes to digital giants, mostly US companies.
France became the first major economy to impose such a tax when legislators gave their final approval while Britain unveiled legislation.
The French measure does not specifically target US internet giants, but it is commonly called the Gafa tax, an acronym for Google, Amazon, Facebook and Apple.
French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire will meet separately with his US counterpart Steven Mnuchin, with the tax measure expected to feature prominently in their discussions.
Even before the final vote by French lawmakers, the US announced it was opening a so-called Section 301 investigation into the measure.
A Section 301 investigation was used by the Trump administration to justify tariffs on China.
Washington and Beijing have lashed out at each other with punitive tariffs on about $360 billion in goods in a trade dispute that has roiled global financial markets and undermined business confidence.
“We will urge Mnuchin to accelerate efforts to define tax rules for the 21st century rather than threaten us with Section 301, sanctions, retaliatory measures, which aren’t really the best actions for allies to use on one another,” said a French government official on condition of anonymity.
“We need 21st century tax rules for a 21st century economy,” said the official.
French and British officials have indicated their preference for an overarching deal, which is being negotiated via the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) and the Group of 20, and they would abandon tech taxes if an agreement is reached.
The French government official said the US supports the tax reform effort, but played down the possibility of a breakthrough, such as an agreement on a minimum tax rate, one way to discourage so-called tax optimisation by firms.
“It won’t be possible to set a rate at this meeting,” said the official. “It’s premature. We need to get agreement on the principle first.”