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Australia likely to hit Apple, Google, Alibaba, Uber with higher taxes

byCustoms Today Report
31/03/2015
in Uncategorized
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CANBERRA: Australian Treasurer Joe Hockey hinted at changes that could force digital companies like Apple Inc, Google Inc, Alibaba Group Holding and Uber to pay more tax on transactions that take place in Australia. Australia’s 30 percent company tax rate is higher than many of its competitors’ and a third of all company tax is paid by just 12 companies.”I want to find a way for them to pay the GST,” Hockey told reporters, referring to the goods and sales tax, after releasing a discussion paper on the country’s “unsustainable” tax system. “We’re not collecting the revenue that we should be collecting and that we want to collect, that is fair,” Hockey said. Up for discussion are a cut to Australia’s corporate tax rate, a broadening of the goods and services that are included in the GST and a new levy on bank deposits.

“New technology, changing consumer behavior and increasing global trade are threatening the medium and long-term viability of our taxation system,” Hockey told reporters in Canberra. “For too long, our taxation system has been reactive not proactive.”

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Australia led a push by the Group of 20 as its chair last year to develop stricter rules on cross border taxation to close loopholes that have allowed companies like Google, Amazon.com Inc and Starbucks Corp to avoid paying taxes.

The Australian government collects up to 70 percent of its revenue from company tax and personal income tax, a level that Hockey said is unsustainable.

It needs the support of the state governments to make any changes to the GST, which at 10 percent is one of the lowest in the developed world.

At the other end of the spectrum, Hockey suggested that Australia’s company tax was too high and is being eroded by online-based companies.

Hockey stressed that the existing bank deposit levy of 0.5 percent on deposits up to A$250,000 was introduced by the previous labour government and suggested it was not enough.

 

Tags: AustraliaGST Companyhigher taxrate overhaul

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