Melchionna PLLC

Navigation

Recent Posts


  • The New U.S. Tariffs Regime Introduced on April 2, 2025. An Intro.
  • Artificial Intelligence and the legal profession
  • Melchionna PLLC and Grimaldi Alliance
  • How AI Works and AI Liability
  • Crypto Litigation: an update

Who we are – Practice Areas


  • About us
  • Alcohol Law
  • Art law
  • Business law
  • Fashion law
  • Finance and banking
  • Food law
  • International tax
  • International trade
  • Internet Law
  • M&A and corporate law
  • Money laundering
  • Tax Law
  • Technology law
  • Trademark law

Melchionna Copyright 2019

Hydra WordPress Theme by EckoThemes.

Published with WordPress.

Related Articles

Filter by Category

  • Business law(19)
  • M&A and corporate law(15)
  • Food law(13)
  • International trade(10)
  • Technology law(8)
  • International tax(8)
  • Internet Law(5)
  • Tax Law(5)
  • Alcohol Law(5)
  • About us(4)
  • Finance and banking(4)
  • Money laundering(3)
  • Art law(2)
  • Fashion law(1)
  • Trademark law(1)

Filter by Author

  • iulia@plus972group.com (17)
  • lcmm@melchionnalaw.com (56)
Back to Latest Articles
About us

People

Avv. Flavia Betti Tonini, PhD, Of Counsel Flavia Betti Tonini is an experienced attorney with a solid background in corporate law, compliance, criminal law, and...

Posted on 13th January 2023 by lcmm@melchionnalaw.com

About us

Mission and Values

Mission Melchionna PLLC is an indipendent law firm. Melchionna PLLC’s mission is to provide outstanding legal services and tax advice. We focus on building a relationship with...

Posted on 5th November 2019 by lcmm@melchionnalaw.com

About us

Melchionna PLLC, a law firm with a focus on business, corporate, tax, and IP law.

About us Melchionna PLLC represents and assists North American and European business clients in achieving their goals with sound legal advice and innovative solutions to current...

Posted on 18th February 2019 by lcmm@melchionnalaw.com

International tax

A new Digital Service Tax in France soon to be followed by other countries: digital presence and tax sovereignties

The increasingly globalized economy and income produced from digital media, combined with a renewed push for nationalism and protectionism, raises the issue of whether...

Posted on 15th October 2019 by lcmm@melchionnalaw.com

Food law

October 10, 2019, Update on “The United States is set to impose new tariffs on goods imported from certain countries of the European Union: the WTO DS316 Decision.” Wines and Fortified (or Liqueur) wine

Based on the most recent US tariffs affecting European goods, Italian wines will not be subject to the new 25% tariff. However, Liqueurs and Cordials will be. This area is highly...

Posted on 10th October 2019 by lcmm@melchionnalaw.com

Business law

The United States is set to impose new tariffs on goods imported from certain countries of the European Union: the WTO DS316 Decision

On 2 October, the Word Trade Organization (WTO) issued a decision (DS316 European Communities and certain Member States) authorizing the US to impose retaliatory tariffs on $7.5...

Posted on 6th October 2019 by lcmm@melchionnalaw.com

Business law

Protect your money. Use two-step verification for wire transfers

Wiring money internationally to clients, suppliers, and/or consultants may be a risky task for some businesses. The Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (“FinCEN”) reported...

Posted on 6th August 2019 by lcmm@melchionnalaw.com

Food law

Update: Tennessee Wine and Spirits Retailers Association v. Thomas

This post follows up on an earlier post written about the same case. Tennessee law imposes a residency requirement on individuals (and companies) wishing to operate retail liquor...

Posted on 11th July 2019 by lcmm@melchionnalaw.com

Trademark law

Trademark registration for foreign applicants is set to change on August 3rd

On July 2nd, the United States Patent and Trademark Office (“USPTO”) announced a new rule requiring “all foreign-domiciled trademarked applicants, registrants, and parties to...

Posted on 9th July 2019 by lcmm@melchionnalaw.com

Business law

The FTC takes aim at social media advertising

Social media advertising through “Influencers” is about to change. These personalities can bring in anywhere from $10,000 to $100,000 for each sponsored product recommendation or...

Posted on 28th June 2019 by lcmm@melchionnalaw.com

Food law

Food Waste: FDA is proposing a new “Best if Used By” label but the food industry is not yet taking advantage of the opportunity

Roughly 1/3 of all food produced globally is wasted (1.3 billion tons). Every year Industrialized countries waste $680 billion worth of food, and Americans alone $161 billion....

Posted on 24th May 2019 by lcmm@melchionnalaw.com

Art law

New Tariff on Chinese products may include works of art and artifacts over 100 year old

Importing works of art in the US has almost always been duty free. However, Chinese art may soon be subject to a new 25% tariff due to rising tensions in the US-Chinese trade war....

Posted on 24th May 2019 by lcmm@melchionnalaw.com

M&A and corporate law

Difference between Full-time, Part-time, Temporary employees, and Independent contractors

What are the major features distinguishing employees within a particular business organization? Generally, there are 4 types of employees, and the rules governing each type...

Posted on 24th May 2019 by lcmm@melchionnalaw.com

View Latest Posts
International tax

A new Digital Service Tax in France soon to be followed by other countries: digital presence and tax sovereignties


lcmm@melchionnalaw.com
A new Digital Service Tax in France soon to...
Posted on 15th October 2019 by lcmm@melchionnalaw.com

The increasingly globalized economy and income produced from digital media, combined with a renewed push for nationalism and protectionism, raises the issue of whether multinational enterprises (MNEs) deriving income from cross-border digital sources should pay taxes and which jurisdictions should be permitted to impose these taxes. Both the European Union (EU) and the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) have committed to taking a tougher stance on taxing the income generated by the digital economy, but neither has published a concrete plan thus far. The lack of international consensus on the matter has driven some governments to take unilateral action.

On July 11, 2019 the French government passed a 3% Digital Services Tax (DST) on certain digital services provided by companies with over €25 million ($28 million) earned in France and €750 million ($830 million) earned worldwide. The tax applies retroactively to all transactions beginning January 1, 2019, and the first payments for these taxes are due in October 2019. The tax applies to revenue from online interfaces that allow users to interact with each other and digital services that enable advertisers to target messages based on user data (KPMG, https://home.kpmg/us/en/home/insights/2019/07/tnf-france-digital-services-tax-enacted.html ). To determine how the tax will be assessed, the legislation establishes a formula based on the number of French users, the MNE’s total number of transactions, and the MNE’s gross receipts for a given year to determine what percentage of services is taxable. It also relies on the user’s IP address to decide whether a transaction takes place in France.

France is joined by the UK, Spain, Italy, Hungary, Belgium, and Austria, all of which have also either proposed or implemented a similar tax (Tax Foundation, https://taxfoundation.org/digital-taxes-europe-2019/ ). The countries’ eagerness to impose such a tax may partially be explained by the huge amount of revenue such taxes can raise. In 2019 alone, Apple, Microsoft, Alphabet, Facebook, and Amazon are expected to rake in a collective $192 billion in profits (Reuters, https://www.reuters.com/article/us-france-tax-breakingviews/breakingviews-breakdown-the-global-fight-over-big-techs-taxes-idUSKCN1VC11C ). The French Finance Minister estimates the new DST will affect fifteen American companies but only one French company, making this “tax” more akin to a fee foreign digital MNEs must pay to do business there.

The US Trade Representative has opened an investigation into this tax to determine whether it should be considered a discriminatory tariff. If they find this is the case, retaliation in the form of tariffs or quotas from the United States is expected.

In the end, it is the final consumer who will likely bear the brunt of this dispute. MNEs conducting business in France will likely pass the additional costs on to French consumers, pursue buyouts, or relocate in order to mitigate the effects of the new tax. Pending the US Trade Representative’s decision, American consumers may also find themselves paying higher prices for French goods in the future.

Taxpayers and consumers will always take advantage of the competition that exists among tax authorities, especially in our global economy, as long as this competition exists. In order to make such a tax truly effective without damaging the already stagnating Western economy, the international community will either need to let free trade flow or make consensus-building a priority.

The information provided here does not, and is not intended to, constitute legal advice but simply information for general purposes only and may not be the most up to date. Use of our website or any of its links or resources do not create an attorney-client relationship between the reader, user, or browser and the law firm. The views expressed at, or through, this site are those of the individual authors writing in their individual capacities only.

lcmm@melchionnalaw.com
  • Share Article:
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • Pinterest
  • LinkedIn
  • Reddit