The Online Advertising Tax as the Foundation of a Public Service Internet
Abstract
Online advertising will soon form the largest share of global advertisement revenues. Google and Facebook netted profits of US $29 billion in 2016. While these two giants control more than 66% of all online advertising revenues complex legal company structures have minimised their tax liabilities. This extended policy report considers where they should be taxed and where the value of their activities is actually created. It argues that tax paid by those platforms should be levied in the country where platform users are located when they click on or view an advertisement. Furthermore, the report examines the practical steps needed to ensure transparent accounting of taxed transactions in order to avoid long term negative effects for media and democracy. Considering counter-arguments the author makes the case for an online advertising tax alongside a public service Internet strategy that could support other viable platforms and counter the dangers of duopoly or oligopoly and the high risks of financial bubbles in a world where advertising is the Internet's dominant business model.
Keywords
Facebook, Google, media industries, online advertising, public service internet, tax avoidanceDOI
10.16997/book23ISBN
9781911534952, 9781911534938, 9781911534952Publisher
University of Westminster PressPublisher website
https://www.uwestminsterpress.co.uk/Publication date and place
2018Imprint
University of Westminster PressClassification
Politics and government
Central / national / federal government policies
Political structure and processes
E-commerce: business aspects