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UK debates dotcom tax

The UK has taken a lead in the debate over how ecommerce businesses should be taxed, saying overseas companies that merely locate their servers in the country should be exempt.

uk.internet.com staff, VNU Business Publications 14 Apr 2000
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The UK has taken a lead in the debate over how ecommerce businesses should be taxed, saying overseas companies that merely locate their servers in the country should be exempt.

Currently there is little international consensus on the issue, which is plagued by the competing interests of different tax regimes.

But now Gabs Mahklouf, director of the Inland Revenue's international division, is attempting to move the discussions on. He told a conference in Lisbon that early decisions are needed on the status of websites and internet servers. "We need decisions that work in the real world as well as in the heads of lawyers," he said.

Mahklouf said neither the location of the website nor a server are sufficient reasons to tax a company. "We take that view regardless of whether the server is owned, rented or otherwise at the disposal of the business".

His views have been given a cautious welcome by the Organisation for Economic Corporation and Development, which in September will publish its own opinions on the tax status of dotcoms.

The group is examining whether internet companies should always be taxed in the country of their headquarters, or if there are circumstances in which they should be taxed elsewhere.

Under discussion is the issue of whether an online casino should be taxed according to the location of its server through which all transactions are routed, or if the host company should be taxed.

Current uncertainty over the tax laws relating to internet gambling has led to many companies locating their servers offshore, with most of the big UK betting organisations setting up their internet operations in places such as Gibraltar and the Isle of Man because.

This story has been republished from uk.internet.com

See also:

Although three out of four adults in the UK now use the internet in some shape or form, very few actually take the plunge and buy goods online. Julian Patterson looks at why ecommerce is not taking off in Europe as quickly as might be expected.  12 Jul 2000
Talk of the death of the dotcom phenomenon may be exaggerated, but the collapse of ecommerce pioneers such as boo.com can teach the industry a few lessons in realism. Julian Patterson takes a look at what led to the bursting of the bubble and what the fallout is likely to be.  12 Jun 2000
In the first of a weekly series of ecommerce special reports, Julian Patterson sets the scene with a time-warped retrospective written five years from now. In coming weeks, we'll be returning to the present with more down-to-earth reports on the ASP market, e-procurement, consumer services and m-commerce.  29 May 2000
Two brothers still in their twenties are the latest to hit the dotcom jackpot, collecting £20m each after selling the internet company they founded just three years ago.  25 Apr 2000
The roller-coaster ride of high-technology share prices is exposing the weaknesses of many New Economy IT suppliers, and could put IT managers back in charge of supervising their companies' ebusiness efforts.  20 Apr 2000
The Shadow Chancellor, Michael Portillo, hit out at the government's ebusiness policy yesterday accusing it of increasing the tax burden and wrapping the new economy in red tape.  14 Apr 2000
The UK government says it is close to defusing the row between hi-tech companies over national insurance charges on unapproved share option schemes.  10 Apr 2000
Freelancers plan to take the UK government to the European Court, in an attempt to get tax change IR35 struck off the statute book.  06 Apr 2000

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