Digital Tax Repealed: Canada Moves To Calm US Tensions, Restart Trade Negotiations

In a last-minute decision aimed at reviving trade negotiations with Washington, Canada has withdrawn its planned digital services tax just hours before its scheduled implementation.

The tax, which had drawn strong objections from the United States, was expected to affect major American tech companies operating in Canada.

The Canadian finance ministry announced late Sunday that the tax would no longer go into effect as planned on Monday, reported Reuters.

"Monday collection will be halted," the ministry said, adding that Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne would move to repeal the Digital Services Tax Act through new legislation.

Initially proposed in 2020, the digital tax  aimed to impose a 3 per cent levy on revenues earned from Canadian users by large digital companies whose annual local revenue exceeded $20 million. The policy would have been retroactive to 2022 and targeted global tech giants such as Apple, Meta, Google (owned by Alphabet), and Amazon.

Trade Talks to Resume Under Pressure

The decision to cancel the tax followed an abrupt halt to trade discussions by US President Donald Trump on Friday, who labelled the tax a "blatant attack." He doubled down on his stance over the weekend, warning of impending new tariffs on Canadian goods within the week, raising fears of renewed trade tensions between the two neighbours.

In response, Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney agreed to restart trade talks with the US, with a target to reach a new agreement by July 21, according to the finance ministry. Talks had initially gained momentum after the two leaders met at the G7 summit in mid-June, where they committed to finalising an economic deal within 30 days.

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How Did Markets React?

News of the tax being dropped lifted investor sentiment, with US stock index futures climbing and optimism spilling into Asian markets. Canada, which purchased $349.4 billion worth of American goods last year and exported $412.7 billion to the US, remains the United States’ second-largest trading partner.

The US had earlier requested trade dispute consultations in 2024, arguing the proposed tax conflicted with commitments under the North American trade pact. Although Canada avoided Trump’s earlier round of sweeping tariffs introduced in April, it still faces 50 per cent duties on steel and aluminium exports to the US.

Canada’s finance ministry reiterated the country’s broader aim to reach a multilateral consensus on digital taxation. “The DST was announced in 2020 to address the fact that many large technology companies operating in Canada may not otherwise pay tax on revenues generated from Canadians,” the statement read. “Canada’s preference has always been a multilateral agreement related to digital services taxation.”

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