Saturday, May 30, 2026
ADVT 
National

Calls mount for pause on Canada's digital services tax targeting tech giants

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Jun, 2025 11:47 AM
  • Calls mount for pause on Canada's digital services tax targeting tech giants

Ottawa is under pressure to pause digital services tax legislation that directs large tech companies to make a big retroactive payment by June 30.

Canadian and U.S. business groups, organizations representing U.S. tech giants and American members of Congress have all signed letters calling for the tax to be eliminated or paused.

The Canadian Chamber of Commerce and other organizations say retaliatory measures in a U.S. spending and tax bill could hit Canadians’ pension funds and investments.

A portion of U.S. President Donald Trump's "big, beautiful" bill could increase withholding and income tax "on any holding of an American asset by a Canadian or the U.S. operations of a Canadian-parented company," the groups warned in an open letter Friday. 

"The negative impact of this measure cannot be understated for the Canadian economy," the letter added. "Every pension fund, retirement fund, investment account, and deeply interconnected investment funds with American holdings, held by the likes of teachers, municipal workers, elected officials, and regular everyday Canadian families, are at risk."

Canada's digital services tax is set to take effect just weeks before a deadline Canada and the U.S. have set for coming up with a new trade deal.

The tax, which will hit companies like Amazon, Google, Meta, Uber and Airbnb, imposes a three-per-cent levy on revenue from Canadian users. It’s expected to bring in an estimated $7.2 billion over five years and the first payment is retroactive to 2022.

A June 11 letter signed by 21 members of Congress says that first payment will cost U.S. companies $2 billion US.

It says U.S. companies will pay 90 per cent of the revenue Canada will collect from the tax.

A separate letter from U.S. industry associations and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce sent earlier in the month called the retroactive requirement an "egregious overreach."

The office of Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne declined to answer when asked whether the government is considering putting the tax on hold.

Picture Courtesy: AP Photo/Thibault Camus, File

MORE National ARTICLES

Winter storm watch issued for Yukon

Winter storm watch issued for Yukon
Environment Canada has issued a winter storm watch for the South Klondike Highway from Carcross to White Pass. It says that is due to a frontal system moving across the area today.

Winter storm watch issued for Yukon

Foreign investment drives growth in BC

Foreign investment drives growth in BC
Invest Vancouver — Metro Vancouver's regional economic development service — has released a new report that it says shows "how foreign direct investment is a powerful driver of employment and economic growth in B-C." The report says in 2022 that foreign multinational enterprises employed more than 349-thousand people in B-C, which marked a 46.3 per cent increase when compared to 2016.

Foreign investment drives growth in BC

RCMP rolls out body-worn cameras for officers nationally

RCMP rolls out body-worn cameras for officers nationally
The RCMP will begin its rollout of body-worn cameras for RCMP officers across the country next week. It expects deployment of more than 10,000 cameras to be finished in the next 12 to 18 months.

RCMP rolls out body-worn cameras for officers nationally

Trudeau off to APEC in Peru, G20 summit in Brazil as peer nations brace for Trump

Trudeau off to APEC in Peru, G20 summit in Brazil as peer nations brace for Trump
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is on his way to South America this afternoon heading first to Lima, Peru for the APEC summit and then to the G20 summit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Both summits aim to improve the multilateral institutions that have drawn skepticism from U.S. president-elect Donald Trump.

Trudeau off to APEC in Peru, G20 summit in Brazil as peer nations brace for Trump

Rent inflation to slow in the next few years, Desjardins predicts

Rent inflation to slow in the next few years, Desjardins predicts
The rate at which Canadian rental prices are increasing should slow in the coming years as the government's plan to cut back immigration numbers takes hold, a new report from Desjardins says. Rents have been rising fast and rent inflation is "much higher" than increases in the price of owned homes, it said. Inflation of rented accommodation was 8.3 per cent in the third quarter of this year, "the fastest pace since the early 1980s."

Rent inflation to slow in the next few years, Desjardins predicts

Energy experts think Donald Trump will make tariff exemptions for Canadian oil

Energy experts think Donald Trump will make tariff exemptions for Canadian oil
President-elect Donald Trump's promise to slap an across-the-board tariff of at least 10 per cent on all imports including from Canada is unlikely to apply to Canadian oil, energy experts are predicting. The threat of the tariff is causing a lot of concern north of the border, where the Canadian Chamber of Commerce said such a tariff could take a $30-billion bite out of the Canadian economy.

Energy experts think Donald Trump will make tariff exemptions for Canadian oil