The Trump administration is confused about European VAT taxes. Here is how they work

  • Officials in the Trump administration claim they're tariffs
Reciprocal tariffs Trump 2

It will be interesting to see what the Trump administration today says about European VAT taxes, which seem to be a focus of several administration officials including Peter Navarro.

That thinking is causing confusion because these are essentially consumption taxes.

In any case, the Tax Foundation is out with a worthwhile read explaining how European VAT taxes work in comparison to US sales taxes.

Two scenarios to illustrate.

US export to Germany:

  • Ford manufactures a car in the USA and exports it to Germany.
  • When the car arrives in Germany, German VAT (e.g., 19%) is applied at importation.
  • A German consumer buys the car and pays the 19% VAT, just like they would for a German-made car. The VAT is kept by the selling company because it's already pre-paid the VAT.

German car sold in Germany:

  • BMW manufactures a car in Germany and sells it domestically.
  • The consumer pays German VAT (19%) on the BMW and it goes to the government.

This is well-understood but for some reason the Trump administration sees it as a tariff, though it could all be posturing to set up a move to tax German car exports.

Top Brokers

Sponsored

General Risk Warning
investingLive Premium
Telegram Community
Gain Access