Many countries are talking about new digital services taxes because big tech companies are earning a lot of money but not always paying their fair share in taxes.
Imagine you have a lemonade stand. You sell lemonade to your neighbors, and you pay tax on the money you make. Now imagine there's a super popular lemonade company that sells lemonade all over town, even to other towns! They make a lot of money, but they don’t pay as much tax as they should because they do business in many places.
That’s kind of what is happening with big tech companies like Google or Facebook. They have users and customers everywhere, but they might only pay tax in one place, where their main office is. So other countries are saying, “Wait! You're making money here too, so you should also pay tax here!”
Some countries are creating a new kind of tax called a digital services tax, which makes these big companies pay more tax based on where they do business, not just where their office is.
It’s like if your lemonade company had to pay tax in every town it sold lemonade, not just the one with its main stand.
Examples
- Imagine if you had to pay more taxes just because you live in a city with lots of big companies.
- France wants tech giants to pay more taxes, so they’re thinking about a new kind of tax.
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See also
- Do We Actually Need Taxes?
- Are this budgets tax changes really an assault on aspiration?
- Does health budget investment signal continued austerity?
- How can jobseeker benefits be increased without exceeding the budget?
- How are central banks responding to current inflation rates?