Return To Rage Page
EU considers taxing emails and SMSs
EU considers taxing emails and SMSs
Friday May 26, 01:18 PM
By Darren Ennis
BRUSSELS (Reuters)
European Union lawmakers are investigating a proposed
tax on emails and mobile phone text messages as a way to fund the 25-member
bloc in the future.
A European Parliament working group is reviewing the idea, tabled by Alain
Lamassoure, a prominent French MEP and member of the centre-right European
People's Party, the assembly's largest group.
Lamassoure, a member of Jacques Chirac's UMP party, is proposing to add a
tax of around 1.5 cents (0.8 pence) on text or SMS messages and a 0.00001
cent levy on every email sent.
"This is peanuts, but given the billions of transactions every day, this
could still raise an immense income," he said.
Currently the EU budget is funded through a combination of import duties,
value added tax revenues and direct contributions from member states -- the
so-called "Gross National Income resource", which is calculated according to
wealth.
However, following a year-long battle over the current seven-year budget,
agreed last December, it was decided that the way in which the EU is funded
should be changed, with new proposals expected by 2008/2009.
A single "EU tax" has found support among many of the 25 EU governments,
MEP's and the European Commission, the EU's executive arm. Other ideas
include a tax on airline tickets and an extra levy on oil companies.
In Italy, the concept of a tax on texting was floated in the past, as a way
to help offset the country's huge deficit, although it was flatly rejected
by the outgoing government.
But Lamassoure argues that with billions of emails and texts sent around the
world, it's a novel and simple way to raise funds from new technology.
"Exchanges between countries have ballooned, so everyone would understand
that the money to finance the EU should come from the benefits engendered by
the EU," he said.
Return To Rage Page