Allocation of the Right to Tax Income from Digital Intermediary Platforms – Challenges and Possibilities for Taxation in the Jurisdiction of the User

The authors analyse the current (lack of) possibilities for userjurisdictions to tax the value generated by the increased use of digital intermediary platforms. Focus is on analysing the possibilities for userjurisdictions to tax the remuneration received by a foreign enterprise owning a digital in...

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Main Authors: Louise Fjord Kjærsgaard, Peter Koerver Schmidt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Aalborg Universitetsforlag 2018-11-01
Series:Nordic Journal of Commercial Law
Online Access:https://journals.aau.dk/index.php/NJCL/article/view/2488
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spelling doaj-fee75f5af04a4e7ca6dced16d03d34672021-01-27T14:16:08ZengAalborg UniversitetsforlagNordic Journal of Commercial Law1459-96862018-11-01110.5278/ojs.njcl.v0i1.2488Allocation of the Right to Tax Income from Digital Intermediary Platforms – Challenges and Possibilities for Taxation in the Jurisdiction of the UserLouise Fjord KjærsgaardPeter Koerver Schmidt The authors analyse the current (lack of) possibilities for userjurisdictions to tax the value generated by the increased use of digital intermediary platforms. Focus is on analysing the possibilities for userjurisdictions to tax the remuneration received by a foreign enterprise owning a digital intermediary platform and on disucussing whether the users’ provision of personal data in exchange for access to the platform could be considered a barter transaction for tax purposes in the userjurisdiction. Among other things, it is concluded that user-jurisdictions, pursuant to current international tax treaties, will normally be precluded from taxing the income of foreign platform enterprises, as the platform enterprises are often able to deliver their digital services remotely. Against this background, a number of tax policy challenges and options of relevance for taxing platform enterprises are discussed, in particular the proposed directive on significant digital presence recently put forward by the European Commisssion. It is concluded that the proposal may prove to be an adequate step towards taxation in the userjurisdictions, even though the proposal needs further work in order to become sufficiently clear and targeted and the scope may be limited. https://journals.aau.dk/index.php/NJCL/article/view/2488
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Louise Fjord Kjærsgaard
Peter Koerver Schmidt
spellingShingle Louise Fjord Kjærsgaard
Peter Koerver Schmidt
Allocation of the Right to Tax Income from Digital Intermediary Platforms – Challenges and Possibilities for Taxation in the Jurisdiction of the User
Nordic Journal of Commercial Law
author_facet Louise Fjord Kjærsgaard
Peter Koerver Schmidt
author_sort Louise Fjord Kjærsgaard
title Allocation of the Right to Tax Income from Digital Intermediary Platforms – Challenges and Possibilities for Taxation in the Jurisdiction of the User
title_short Allocation of the Right to Tax Income from Digital Intermediary Platforms – Challenges and Possibilities for Taxation in the Jurisdiction of the User
title_full Allocation of the Right to Tax Income from Digital Intermediary Platforms – Challenges and Possibilities for Taxation in the Jurisdiction of the User
title_fullStr Allocation of the Right to Tax Income from Digital Intermediary Platforms – Challenges and Possibilities for Taxation in the Jurisdiction of the User
title_full_unstemmed Allocation of the Right to Tax Income from Digital Intermediary Platforms – Challenges and Possibilities for Taxation in the Jurisdiction of the User
title_sort allocation of the right to tax income from digital intermediary platforms – challenges and possibilities for taxation in the jurisdiction of the user
publisher Aalborg Universitetsforlag
series Nordic Journal of Commercial Law
issn 1459-9686
publishDate 2018-11-01
description The authors analyse the current (lack of) possibilities for userjurisdictions to tax the value generated by the increased use of digital intermediary platforms. Focus is on analysing the possibilities for userjurisdictions to tax the remuneration received by a foreign enterprise owning a digital intermediary platform and on disucussing whether the users’ provision of personal data in exchange for access to the platform could be considered a barter transaction for tax purposes in the userjurisdiction. Among other things, it is concluded that user-jurisdictions, pursuant to current international tax treaties, will normally be precluded from taxing the income of foreign platform enterprises, as the platform enterprises are often able to deliver their digital services remotely. Against this background, a number of tax policy challenges and options of relevance for taxing platform enterprises are discussed, in particular the proposed directive on significant digital presence recently put forward by the European Commisssion. It is concluded that the proposal may prove to be an adequate step towards taxation in the userjurisdictions, even though the proposal needs further work in order to become sufficiently clear and targeted and the scope may be limited.
url https://journals.aau.dk/index.php/NJCL/article/view/2488
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AT peterkoerverschmidt allocationoftherighttotaxincomefromdigitalintermediaryplatformschallengesandpossibilitiesfortaxationinthejurisdictionoftheuser
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