Trade war goes digital: countries eye tariffs on Internet economy
Trade war goes digital:
countries eye tariffs on Internet economy
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Ban on tariffs on digital music, software to expire
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India, South Africa have called for "rethink" of ban
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WTO to decide on renewal amid rising pressure
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Demise of WTO top body could spur tariff retaliation
By
Emma Farge Monday, 9 December 2019 00:55 GMT
GENEVA, Dec 6 (Reuters) - A 20-year global moratorium on
imposing tariffs on digital trade could end next week if India or South Africa
makes good on threats, according to trade officials and documents, potentially
forcing people to pay duties on software and movie downloads.
Since 1998, World Trade
Organization (WTO) members have renewed a ban on import duties on so-called
"electronic transmissions", worth up to $255 billion a year by one
estimate.
Some think this favors rich
countries, given it received strong backing from Washington at the outset and
most of the lost customs revenues are thought to be born by developing
countries.
Pressure is now growing to
lift the ban as more books and movies become digital, potentially reducing
revenues further.
India and South Africa
circulated an internal WTO document, reviewed by Reuters this week, saying that
rising digitalization compelled "a rethink of the role of the temporary
moratorium" last year, citing the potential of 3D printing to manufacture
products. It will be decided on next week and renewal requires full consensus.
Asked about its position, South
Africa's WTO Ambassador Xolelwa Mlumbi-Peter said in an emailed response this
week that it was "still consulting on this important decision."
India did not respond to a
request for comment.
"At the moment there
are a number of countries that feel confident they can stand aside from the
global consensus," said the International Chamber of Commerce's (ICC)
Secretary General John Denton. "It could break the Internet."
A proposal backed by 21
countries including China and Canada seeks to extend the ban for at least six
months when it expires at year end. Deal-broker Switzerland said "a large
part of the WTO has signaled its support for the Moratorium".
Such duties could be
difficult to apply and it is not clear how it would be determined where the
digital product originated from and whether it is an import.
"How do you put a
tariff on a byte? How would you capture millions of data flows from multiple
sources flowing across countries' borders every minute of every day,"
asked Denton.
However, the first possible
answers are emerging. Indonesia created tariff codes for digital goods in 2018,
fixing the level at 0 percent for now.
LOST REVENUES?
Should the moratorium end,
it does not mean that tariffs will immediately follow, and Mlumbi-Peter
stressed that. But this is seen as more likely in a new culture of
permissiveness following the expected paralysis of the WTO's top ruling body
after Dec. 10.
"If someone tries to
experiment putting customs duties on even a limited set of products or
services, then there is a risk of immediate retaliation absent of the dispute
settlement function," said the ICC's Andrew Wilson.
Estimates of the ban's
effect vary. At the top of the scale, a recent U.N. report said potential
annual tariff revenue losses could be up to $10.4 billion a year, with more
than $10 billion lost by WTO developing countries.
"More and more
production is going to be digitized in future so developing countries will lose
tariff revenues," Rashmi Banga, the report's author, said.
However, an OECD study
questioned these assumptions, arguing that the revenue gains from lifting the
ban would be relatively small and tariffs would lead to higher prices for
consumers among other costs.
(Reporting by Emma Farge; Editing by Toby Chopra)
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