Deutsche Post VAT privileges cut
German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Cabinet agreed to reduce a tax break granted to Deutsche Post AG while extending the benefit to the mail carriers’ competitors.
Cabinet members meeting in Berlin agreed that from 2010 Deutsche Post will lose an exemption from charging value-added tax on some services such as bulk business mail. At the same time, the tax privileges given to Deutsche Post will be extended to competitors that match the former monopoly in providing universal services.
The step reflects Germany’s aim to “stay abreast of liberalization in the postal market,” the government said in a statement, adding that the plan meets a European Union demand for changes in value-added tax exemptions.
The measures, if approved by parliament, will mean Deutsche Post facing competitors who enjoy VAT privileges at the same time as banks and mail-order companies eat into its core business activities. The Bonn-based company has long fought against an amendment of its tax privilege, citing the costs of fulfilling its charter to provide a universal post service to Europe’s most populous nation.
