Prof. Allison Christians presents as part of the 2023 Tax Speaker Series
Allison Christians (McGill) will present Taxing Big Data When the United States Disagrees (with Tarcisio Diniz Magalhães) via Zoom at UC Law San Francisco on Tuesday 10/17 as part of the 2023 Tax Speaker Series. If you would like to attend, please contact Heather Field.
Prof. Christians’ abstract is as follows:
Why might countries seek to tax Big Data, and if there are good reasons to do so, what kinds of rules would be most feasible to adopt without contravening the existing global legal architecture? A number of countries have adopted stand-alone digital services taxes pending multilateral agreement on a coordinated solution (aka pillar 1). But if pillar 1 fails to materialize, the United States and U.S. firms will likely seek redress against these unilateral taxes through trade and investment regimes. This Article argues that alternative legal approaches might be less exposed to the same pushback. In particular, unilaterally extending domestic withholding tax regimes to specified digital services fees might be the best option to tax Big Data when the United States disagrees. We explain what it means to tax Big Data and why countries want to do so, review the events that led to the unresolvable status quo, and argue that withholding taxes ultimately have a better chance of surviving resistance from the United States and U.S. firms.