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

tax-tech-summit-600x375

The global community plans to reshape the international tax rules to address the tax challenges of the digitalising economy. Companies must react.

Taxpayers can voice their opinions anonymously in International Tax Review’s survey on the taxation of the digital economy.

Take the survey here.

ITR’s survey asks corporate taxpayers to outline their opinions 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

Hotel La Tour had argued that VAT should be recoverable as a result of proceeds being used for a taxable business activity
Tax professionals are still going to be needed, but AI will make it easier for them than starting from zero, EY’s global tax disputes leader Luis Coronado tells ITR
AI and assisting clients with navigating global tax reform contributed to the uptick in turnover, the firm said
In a post on X, Scott Bessent urged dissenting countries to the US/OECD side-by-side arrangement to ‘join the consensus’ to get a deal over the line
A new transatlantic firm under the name of Winston Taylor is expected to go live in May 2026 with more than 1,400 lawyers and 20 offices
As ITR’s exclusive data uncovers in-house dissatisfaction with case management, advisers cite Italy’s arcane tax rules
The new guidance is not meant to reflect a substantial change to UK law, but the requirement that tax advice is ‘likely to be correct’ imposes unrealistic expectations
Taylor Wessing, whose most recent UK revenues were £283.7m, would become part of a £1.23bn firm post combination
China and a clutch of EU nations have voiced dissent after Estonia shot down the US side-by-side deal; in other news, HMRC has awarded companies contracts to help close the tax gap
An EY survey of almost 2,000 tax leaders also found that only 49% of respondents feel ‘highly prepared’ to manage an anticipated surge of disputes
Gift this article