UN Draft Protocol Targets Digital Taxation of Tech Giants
A May 5 draft, due for discussion in New York in August, proposes a shift in digital tax jurisdiction. The protocol aims to determine where online companies should pay taxes based on their user base locations rather than their country of incorporation.
This text, as reported by Bloomberg Tax, is the latest attempt to translate years of debate into international law. It covers a wide range of digital activities: online advertising, search, social media, cloud computing, data sharing, and more.
The draft falls under the UN Framework Convention on International Tax Cooperation, approved by member states in late 2024. The Intergovernmental Negotiating Committee (INC) aims to finalize the convention and two protocols—one on cross-border services and another on dispute prevention—by 2027.
Key Points:
- India, Brazil, and many Asian and African countries strongly advocate for source-based digital taxation, arguing that current rules let profitable platforms minimize their tax burden in low-tax countries.
- The US has historically resisted both unilateral and multilateral digital taxes, and a Trump-era Treasury is unlikely to change this stance, potentially leading to retaliatory tariffs.
- This draft represents a shift, indicating growing international impatience with the OECD’s slow progress on Pillar One of its digital taxation proposal.
Open Questions:
The draft raises questions about tax rates, allocation formulas, and dispute mechanisms. August negotiations will be crucial in determining the final shape and effectiveness of this potential game-changer in global tax policy. Even after adoption, ratification by enough states to make it binding will take time. Nonetheless, the direction is clear: countries are moving towards expanding their right to tax tech giants based on where they do business.
By Alina Maria Stan