The European Commission has taken aim at the ebook industry, calling
for open standards and reduced taxes on electronic publications.
Neelie Kroes, vice-president responsible for the EU's Digital Agenda, told the Federation of European Publishers in Frankfurt that consumers
should be able to read books bought for one ebook reader on another
device if they chose.
“As the e-publishing sector develops, we may also have to consider
how to deliver interoperability,” Kroes said. “That might mean, for
example, that people can buy content for any device from any supplier,
transfer that content between their own devices, and keep possession of
it even beyond the device's lifespan.
“That could deliver openness, freedom and choice for the consumer -
with benefits too for smaller market players like independent bookshops.
Open standards already exist in this field, but take-up is still low.”
Another wider issue that's been seen as holding back the ebook market
is the price of titles, and although this depends partly on publishers
the price is elevated further by governments applying VAT on electronic
titles, while hard copies remain VAT free.
Kroes called on governments, such as the UK that imposes 20% tax on
ebooks, to change the rules to bring them into line with paperbacks,
which are exempt.
“We should ensure that public policy, for example tax treatment, does
not distort the developing market, does not 'play favourites' between
different technological solutions,” she said. “We need to work to
converge the tax treatment of digital content.
“I just cannot explain why ebooks and printed books are taxed
differently,” she said. “For the moment, in the majority of member state
responses to the Commission's Green Paper on VAT, we have detected a
really disappointing level of conservatism on this point.”
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1 comment:
Unfortunately, not much fuss has been made about the sales tax anomaly. As reported in the March Black Horse Extra, a Glasgow MP raised the matter in the House of Commons, but nothing much has been recorded since. A suspicion is that the general public is prepared to be told books (especially fiction) are a luxury. It would be no surprise if the anomaly were to be removed simply by putting the 20% tax on paper books, too. That would hasten the demise of the book, other than as an already expensive item for collectors.
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