The Canadian governmentĀ announcedĀ late Sunday that it would scrap the tax on U.S. tech firms that was set to take effect Monday in a bid to bring the Trump administration back to the table and avoid heightened tariffs in the coming weeks.Ā
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The move was successful for Ottawa, with the White House saying that trade talks wouldĀ resumeĀ immediately. It was also cheered by the tech industry, which has lambasted digital services taxes as āunfairā and ādiscriminatory.āĀ
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But experts say Canada’s move could put pressure on other nations to follow suit and rescind their tech taxes.
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āGoing forward, I think the fact that Trump managed to bully or cajole Canada into dropping its [digital services tax] means that this will be a big item that he insists on in talks with Europe and any countries in all these trade negotiations,ā said Gary Hufbauer, a nonresident senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics.Ā
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āI see this as a harbinger of a more general repeal of digital services taxes,ā he added, calling it a āpretty big deal and a real victory for Trump.āĀ
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Since taking office for a second time, Trump has repeatedly criticized taxes and fines on U.S. tech firms. He slammed the European Union (EU) in January, alleging that the blocās hefty fines against American companies amount to aĀ āform of taxation.āĀ
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The EUās top court ruled in September thatĀ Apple owed more than $14 billion in back taxes to Ireland, while upholding a $2.7 billion fineĀ against GoogleĀ by European antitrust regulators.Ā Ā
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Meta, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, was alsoĀ fined about $840 million for antitrust violations in November. The social media giant was hit with another $228 million fine in April, alongside Apple, which faced a $570 million penalty.Ā
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Trump railed against the EU during a meeting with the NATO secretary-general in March, calling the European blocĀ ānastyā over the tech fines, as well as a tariff on U.S.-made cars.Ā
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āTheyāre suing Google, theyāre suing Facebook, theyāre suing all of these companies, and theyāre taking billions of dollars out of American companies,ā he said at the time. Ā
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The president has also taken aim at digital services taxes in particular, signing an executive order in February slamming the taxes as ādesigned to plunder American companiesā andĀ declaring that the U.S. would respond to such measures with tariffs or other actions.Ā
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Check out the full report at TheHill.com first thing Monday.