Half a billion dollar tax break for tech giants – Labour

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The Government is taking the Digital Services Tax off their books, effectively handing a $479 million tax break to global tech giants, like Facebook and Google.

โ€œFirst it was tax breaks for landlords and tobacco companies, now itโ€™s multinational technology companies,โ€ Labour finance and economy spokesperson Barbara Edmonds said.

โ€œUnder National if youโ€™re already doing well, you can have a tax break to do even better. But everyone else, everyday Kiwis, miss out.

โ€œThe message from this Government could not be clearer: if youโ€™re a woman seeking equal pay, or a family trying to get the FamilyBoost payment that was promised to you, then you donโ€™t matter.

โ€œBut if a wealthy corporation comes asking for help, they will bend over backwards to give them a breakโ€”at your expense.

โ€œNicola Willis promised Kiwi families $250 a fortnight, but she canโ€™t find a single family who got it. More than a quarter of their FamilyBoost scheme, about $14 million, has been eaten up in bureaucracy instead of going to families as promised.

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โ€œTheyโ€™re telling New Zealanders we need to tighten our belts, but this Government keeps giving handouts to the people who need it least and taking it from the people who need it most.

โ€œBudgets are about choices, and at every turn this Government is making the wrong choices.

โ€œWe need a government that is focused on improving the lives of New Zealanders, not making global tech giants like Facebook and Google even more profit,โ€ Barbara Edmonds said.

Note to editors: The $479 million figure comes from the Half Year Economic and Fiscal Update 2024 (page 76), which states: โ€œThe forecasts currently account for a 1 January 2026 implementation and include revenue of $479 million over the forecast period in relation to the DST with an additional $146 million per annum expected beyond the forecast period.โ€