South Africa should tax big tech despite US pressure

US tech giants profit from South African users without paying local taxes, prompting calls for a digital services tax. Such a levy could raise R3.5 billion annually to address budget shortfalls. Critics highlight US hypocrisy in opposing these measures while imposing its own tariffs.

South African consumers contribute to the revenues of US tech companies through activities like viewing ads on Instagram, subscribing to Netflix, or engaging on LinkedIn. These profits often flow to low-tax areas in the Caribbean, bypassing local taxation. As the global tax system, designed for physical businesses, struggles to adapt to the digital economy, South Africa faces a fiscal dilemma amid persistent budget deficits.

A 3% digital services tax could generate over R3.5 billion each year, enough to build three new district hospitals annually, according to tax expert Lance Collop. The Davis Tax Committee in 2018 noted the challenges in isolating digital profits but urged action to avoid fiscal irresponsibility. Yet, implementing such a tax risks US retaliation, as seen in investigations against countries like France, where punitive tariffs were applied to protect American firms.

Collop argues that the US embraces tariffs on imports like steel and vehicles under the Trump administration to safeguard its economy, yet deems digital taxes 'discriminatory.' He frames the digital tax as a 'digital tariff' for market access and applies the 'polluter pays' principle, likening Big Tech's role in spreading misinformation and cyberbullying to environmental damage. These social costs, including mental health crises and democratic erosion, burden South African taxpayers while platforms expatriate untaxed profits.

VAT already taxes consumption but does not capture extraction by foreign giants. To counter claims of price pass-through, Collop suggests an aggregate tax on annual revenue, treating it as a business cost rather than a per-transaction fee. The African Tax Administration Forum's blueprint includes a de minimis threshold to exempt local startups, with Kenya and Nigeria already proceeding despite US threats. South Africa must redefine taxable presence based on digital economic activity to end the 'free ride' for cloud empires.

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