Comment by beejiu
2 months ago
That was the intent, but in reality the tax is fully remitted to Google's customers. I'm a small UK business and it appears on my invoice, so I'm effectively the one being taxed. This is why I object to the campaigners calling for 10% DST. They don't realise the tax is mostly remitted back onto UK businesses, not the trillion dollar giants.
What taxes on a business would not be eventually remitted to the customers?
Businesses are traditionally taxed on their profits, not their turnover. Being a turnover tax, DST acts more like VAT does for consumers. Mathematically it has to be passed onto the customers, it just makes Google the collection agent on behalf of the government. This is why turnover taxes are such a bad idea.
The companies in question virtually don't pay any tax on profits though, even though it's pretty clear they're making money hand over fist.
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Out of interest, is that an advertising invoice or something like GCP?
I'm sorry, but until we can find a way to close down the countless other tax loopholes exploited by multinationals, I'd be completely happy with a 10% DST on any advertising targeting UK citizens. Low-hanging fruit.
Google Ads specifically.