Group 1 - The Canadian government has announced a 3% digital services tax on certain tech companies, effective from June 30, 2022, targeting companies with global revenues exceeding $833 million and digital service revenues in Canada exceeding 20 million CAD (approximately 1.05 billion RMB) [5] - Companies affected by this tax include major U.S. digital service providers such as Amazon, Apple, Google, Meta, Uber, and Airbnb [5] - U.S. President Trump has labeled the tax as a "direct and blatant attack" on the U.S. and has decided to terminate all trade negotiations with Canada in response [3][8] Group 2 - Canadian officials are calling for trade diversification to reduce reliance on the U.S. following the announcement of the digital services tax [1] - Canadian Prime Minister Carney expressed a desire to continue negotiations with the U.S. in a manner that serves the best interests of Canadians, despite the abrupt termination of talks by the U.S. [5] - Canadian economist Jim Stanford suggested raising the digital services tax rate to 25% as a countermeasure to U.S. threats, aligning it with U.S. tariffs on Canadian steel, aluminum, and automotive products [7]
竟敢反击美国,特朗普一看对手不是中国,果断掀桌子,事情闹大了
Sou Hu Cai Jing·2025-07-02 03:34