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7 - Introduction to Cross-Border Aspects of VAT

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 February 2015

Alan Schenk
Affiliation:
Wayne State University School of Law
Victor Thuronyi
Affiliation:
Duke University School of Law
Wei Cui
Affiliation:
University of British Columbia, Vancouver
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Summary

Introduction to International Trade

For most countries with VATs, international trade is a significant component of their economies. A country with a VAT must define the jurisdictional reach of the tax. Should the tax reach global supplies or should it be limited to supplies within the country’s territory? Whether global or territorial, should the tax be imposed on production within the country (an origin principle VAT), on domestic consumption (a destination principle VAT), or some combination of the two? Almost every country with a VAT imposes a territorial VAT that relies on the destination principle to define the jurisdictional limits of the tax. Under a pure destination principle, imports are taxed and exports are completely free of tax (zero-rated). With this system, it is important to identify the value of goods and services that are exported (and when they are exported) and identify the value of taxable imports and determine when they are taxable. This chapter discusses the rules that determine where a supply takes place, including the troublesome issues on cross-border transactions relating to the place where services are rendered and intangibles are supplied.

The location or place of the supply of cross-border services has become more significant with the advent of electronically supplied services. If the place of supply rules applicable to the sale of goods and those applicable to the sale of services differ, the supplier must determine whether the sale is of goods or services, and this may be more difficult in the case of electronic commerce. For example, if computer software, music, and videos are transmitted by electronic signals rather than in compact disks or other physical form, is the transaction a sale of goods or a sale of services? Sales of standard packaged software have been treated as sales of goods, but sales of customized software have been treated as sales of services.

Type
Chapter
Information
Value Added Tax
A Comparative Approach
, pp. 187 - 225
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2015

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References

Lambert, H., “VAT and Electronic Commerce: European Union Insights into the Challenges Ahead,” 9 Tax Notes Int’l1645, 1646 (Nov. 23, 1998)Google Scholar
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Deiana, A. P., “Italy: Zero-rated Supplies Preceding Export,” 16 Int’l VAT Monitor, 136 (Mar./Apr. 2005)Google Scholar
Soydan, B. Y., “Simplifying Procedure for VAT Refunds in Turkey,” 13 Int’l VAT Monitor, Vol. 13 21 (Jan./Feb. 2002)Google Scholar
Taxation of Cable Television: First Amendment Limitations,” 109 Harv. L. Rev.440 (1995)
Jenkins, P., “VAT and Telecommunications within the European Union,” 6 Int’l VAT Monitor286 (Sept./Oct. 1995)Google Scholar
Basu, S., “Implementing E-Commerce Tax Policy,” 1 British Tax Review46, 68 (2004)Google Scholar

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