The European Commission published today proposals on the VAT in the digital age initiative. EuroCommerce Director General Christel Delberghe commented:
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“Today’s proposals form an important basis for the creation of a future-proof VAT system across the EU. Retailers and wholesalers are major collectors of VAT and have a strong interest in reducing obstacles to trade. As we will be celebrating 30 years of the Single Market next year, VAT obligations are still among the highest barriers for companies when trading cross-border. It is high time to adapt VAT to the needs of the 21st century.”
In this context EuroCommerce welcomes the ‘VAT in the digital age’ initiative to set the course for modern reporting obligations and e-invoicing, clearer rules concerning the VAT treatment of the platform economy and the use of a single EU VAT registration.
EuroCommerce warmly welcomed the introduction of the VAT One-Stop-Shop in 2021 as a step in the right direction. However, in practice, e-merchants still have to maintain their foreign VAT registrations in every EU country where they are sending or holding stock. This is because the rules do not provide for a single VAT registration in only one Member State for sellers keeping product stocks in several EU Member States to serve consumers as quickly as possible.
To address this issue, EuroCommerce and Ecommerce Europe have launched a campaign recommending policymakers to extend the existing VAT One-Stop-Shop. To reduce administrative burden and costs the One-Stop-Shop needs to include all shipments of merchandise where the seller of record is not located in the EU country of taxation, in particular cross-border movements of own inventory across the EU. Furthermore, it should be extended to shipments of domestic sales from distribution hubs by a seller that is not established in that EU country.