HRES-1340-119
Referred to the Committee on Ways and Means, and in addition to the Committee on Foreign Affairs, for a period to be subsequently determined by the Speaker, in each case for consideration of such provisions as fall within the jurisdiction of the committee concerned.
Sponsored by Ron Estes (R-KS)
What it does
This is a simple resolution (H. Res.), meaning it expresses the opinion of the House of Representatives but does not carry the force of law. It would formally declare the House's opposition to digital services taxes (DSTs) imposed by foreign governments that target U.S.-based technology and digital services companies. It would call on foreign countries to repeal existing DSTs, urge continued multilateral negotiations through the OECD, and support the use of trade tools — including Section 301 investigations — to pressure countries that maintain such taxes.
Who benefits
Large U.S.-based digital and technology companies (e.g., those operating in France, Italy, Spain, Turkey, Austria, and the United Kingdom) that currently pay DSTs on gross revenues earned abroad. U.S. workers employed by those companies. U.S. small businesses that use digital platforms and could face passed-through cost increases from DSTs. U.S. trade negotiators, who gain a formal congressional signal of support for their bargaining position. Shareholders of U.S. digital companies.
Who is hurt
Foreign governments that rely on DST revenue to tax large digital multinationals operating in their markets without a physical presence. Foreign consumers and businesses that may benefit from DST-funded public services. Competing non-U.S. digital companies that are also subject to DSTs but receive no equivalent advocacy. U.S. trading partners that could face retaliatory tariffs or trade restrictions if the U.S. escalates pressure, potentially raising costs for U.S. importers and consumers of those countries' goods.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that DSTs are structurally discriminatory — they apply to gross revenues rather than net income, target a narrow set of companies that are disproportionately American, and deviate from longstanding international tax principles that grant taxing rights to the country where a company is physically established. They point to the U.S. Trade Representative's own Section 301 findings from 2019–2021, which concluded that DSTs in France, Italy, Spain, Turkey, Austria, and the United Kingdom specifically discriminate against U.S. firms. Supporters further contend that congressional backing strengthens U.S. negotiators' leverage in OECD talks and has already produced results, with some trading partners agreeing to withdraw or not implement DSTs following U.S. engagement.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that foreign governments have a legitimate sovereign interest in taxing economic activity that occurs within their borders, even when the company generating that revenue has no physical presence there — a gap in existing international tax rules that DSTs are designed to address. They contend that framing DSTs as inherently discriminatory ignores that U.S. digital giants generate substantial profits from foreign users while paying little or no tax in those countries under current rules. Critics also argue that aggressive use of Section 301 and retaliatory tariffs could escalate trade tensions, raise costs for U.S. consumers and importers, and undermine the multilateral OECD process the resolution simultaneously endorses.