Basically you can justify any amount of nonsense with the ideology of orange man bad.
This country voted for "more of the same, please" and it's adorable to think that "elbows up" tricked millions of simpletons into thinking that "we're tough and we're not gonna take shit from Trump". Viva viva La Resistance!
While Trump is, in fact, pretty bad, that‘a not the argument being presented.
Economically, his tariffs are hot garbage. That’s why developed economies, including his own, have largely moved on from such mercantilist policies for a long, long time now.
The Digital Services Tax is much more nuanced than is being presented in this thread. While I can’t speak to how effective or optimal a policy it’s likely to be, it does reflect an actual economic gap that causes disadvantage for domestic providers of economic goods and services.
If I drive down to Canadian Tire, or hop on their website to order products, I’m buying them from a Canadian based retailer and paying that retailer for those goods. That Canadian retailer pays the applicable level of corporate tax on its earnings in Canada. Those corporate taxes are part of its expenses and those costs return to consumers.
Similarly, if I have a cable TV package from Bell, I pay them for the service, they earn Canadian business income and are domestically taxed on same.
If however we shift that to me purchasing goods from Amazon, in a lot of cases they simply have better prices. Amazon is also quite succesful at shielding its Canadian revenue from Canadian corporate taxes. They certainly still pay tax, but are able to structure to avoid quite a bit more than, say, Canadian Tire can. Keeping it simple and sticking with Amazon, same thing for, say, an Amazon Prime streaming service. Considerable Canadian revenue, partially shielded from Canadian taxation compared to domestic media competitors. They enjoy other regulatory benefits too that bring costs down, such as CanCon.
Now, this is a very simple breakdown, but it highlights that we have foreign entrants to Canadian business, operating exclusively in the online space, and who are able to avoid comparable Canadian business taxation and so undercut Canadian competitors. While taxation approaches to level this playing field need to be gone about carefully, the concept is not inherently wrong or nonsensical. It’s reasonable to think that goods and service providers competing for Canadian business should be on a fairly level playing field in terms of the tax burden they incur for selling me the same goods or services.
How precisely to go about doing this? I’m not qualified to say. It’s certainly obvious why the U.S. would get pissy about this- it takes their complaints about the U.S. ‘subsidizing’ other countries and flips it on its head. ‘Subsidy’ is of course nonsense, but primarily U.S.- based digital companies are currently enjoying an unfair advantage in many markets they enter, Canada being just one of them. Many other major economies have already implemented similar taxes at similar rates.
I have no problem with Amazon or Apple or Netflix or whomever competing in Canadian markets. It’s a good thing for consumer choice. Their Canadian sourced revenues should simply be treated similar in taxation to Canadian revenues from companies who are physically operating here. We were at the table with the U.S. and other OECD countries to come up with a common approach on this, but the U.S. has left those negotiations. Fine, that’s their right, but it gives them less say in what happens. This is becoming another case of Trump picking a fight with everyone at once and being shocked when other players make moves that aren’t what he wants them to make.
There’s not a shred of doubt in my mind that the government didn’t have a late stage Tantrump baked into its planning on this. It’s a very well established pattern at this point; he doesn’t get what he demands, he throws his teddy bear out of the crib and takes to Truth Social. That’s fine. He’s not capable of engaging in calm and mature approaches to trade policy, so it’s one of the challenges our government faces for the next few years. Doesn’t meant we roll over and play dead whenever Trump screams and demands. If he wants to go to the mattresses over Uber and Netflix, it will hurt other sectors of their economy that stand to suffer from instability.
Meanwhile, the digital services companies will quietly carry on recognizing that they need to price in foreign markets levying a direct revenue tax to offset the domestic corporate taxes they can dodge in those markets.
EDIT TO ADD: I forgot the caveat that I don’t think the taxes should be levied retroactively. A company should be able to do business knowing in real time what the tax implications of its decisions and business model are. Applying taxes retroactively isn’t fair; they might have otherwise made different decisions. That would be a reasonable concession to make on this issue.