Survey: Taxation of the digital economy

International Tax Review is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Garden, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2025

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

Survey: Taxation of the digital economy

earthbig

As countries continue their efforts to reform the international tax rules, ITR is gauging in-house tax professionals’ views on the topic. Tell us yours.

Just a few days remain of ITR's survey, in which taxpayers can voice their opinions anonymously on the taxation of the digital economy.

The survey asks corporate taxpayers to outline their opinions on, and their strategic responses to, the multilateral process at the OECD, with its ‘two pillars’ and its anticipated completion date of 2020.

It also provides an opportunity for a frank discussion of countries’ unilateral measures, such as the digital services taxes recently announced by FranceAustria, and others.

The survey will end on Tuesday, June 4 2019. 

Your responses are strictly anonymous.

The results will be featured across a series of articles online and compiled in International Tax Review’s July–August magazine issue. 

For further details, or to share your opinions with our editorial team, please feel free email alexander.hartley@euromoneyplc.com.

Take the survey here.



more across site & shared bottom lb ros

More from across our site

The report is solid and balanced as it correctly underscores the ambitious institutional redesign that Brazil has undertaken in adopting a dual VAT model, experts tell ITR
The Brazilian law firm partner warns against going independent too early, considers the weight of political pressure, and tells ITR what makes tax cool
The lessons from Ireland are clear: selective, targeted, and credible fiscal incentives can unlock supply and investment
The ITR in-house award winner delves into his dramatic novelisation of tax transformation, and declares that 'tax doesn’t need AI right now'
Recent news of job cuts at EY is symptomatic of how the PwC controversy has tarnished the reputation of the entire ‘big four’
Experts reportedly discussed extending the safe harbour to 2027 to give countries more time to legislate; in other news, Baker McKenzie and Greenberg Traurig made senior tax hires
Awards
Submit your nominations to this year's WIBL Americas Awards by January 23
Recent changes in UK tax rules and cross-border requirements are generating high demand for specialist advice, according to MHA
Hany Elnaggar examines how Gulf Cooperation Council countries are internalising transfer pricing norms within evolving fiscal systems shaped by both Islamic and international influences
Where a TP study of comparables produces an arm’s-length range, and the taxpayer’s filed position is outside that range, HMRC will adjust to the median by default
Gift this article