Google is to pass on the cost of digital services taxes in Europe to advertisers, complicating the most recent attempts by governments to capture a bigger slice of the US tech group's revenues.
The company told customers that, from November, it will charge an additional fee for adverts served in the UK, Turkey and Austria, which explicitly covers the extra regulatory costs in those countries.
Advertisers and publishers are worried that such fees will further dent ad spending that has already been hit hard by the pandemic. The move will raise the price of serving an ad on the Google platform, or purchased through Google Ads, by 2 per cent in the UK and 5 per cent in Austria – mirroring the rates of new digital services taxes that have come into force in those jurisdictions.
‘Cost of complying’
In the email to advertisers, Google also said it would charge 5 per cent in Turkey to meet the “significant increases in the complexity and cost of complying with regulations”. All the charges will appear as a separate line item in bills.
Amazon recently took a similar decision to shunt the costs of the UK digital services tax to sellers on its platform.
The UK government estimated its digital levy could raise about £400 million a year by 2021, hitting large social media groups, online marketplaces and search engines.
While the fees are explicitly tied to new taxes – in a manner similar to how some airlines handle airport charges or green taxes – the measures have not been applied to all countries in Europe with digital services levies.
Google has yet to charge higher fees in France, which has suspended collection until the end of the year, by which time the government hopes a global version of the tax will have been agreed. Austria applied its levy in January, Turkey pushed through a digital tax in March and the UK did so in April.
The tech group said on Tuesday that the taxes “increase the cost of digital advertising”. – Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2020