US–India Deal Bars Tariffs on Cross‑Border Streaming
India and the United States have agreed in digital trade talks to prohibit future Customs duties on 'electronic transmissions,' a category that includes cross-border streaming of video and music, software downloads, and other digital content. This bilateral commitment means that even if the WTO moratorium on such duties expires, subscription and pay-per-view streams between the two countries will not face border tariffs and will instead continue to be taxed under domestic regimes such as GST. The measure directly affects OTT and other streaming services operating between the US and India by providing clearer tax treatment for cross-border streams.
Key Takeaways
- Bilateral rule prohibits customs duties on electronic transmissions—explicitly protecting cross‑border OTT streams.
- If the WTO moratorium ends, US‑India streaming exchanges won’t face border tariffs; domestic taxes (e.g., GST) apply instead.
- Provides regulatory certainty for platforms, rights holders, and advertisers operating between the two largest entertainment markets.
- Sets a precedent other countries or trade blocs may follow, shaping future digital‑trade policy and negotiations.
Why It Matters
This deal removes a major layer of uncertainty for streaming businesses that sell subscriptions, PPV or digital content across the US‑India route. For operators and rights owners it reduces the risk of sudden border tariffs that could force price changes, contract renegotiations, or rerouting of delivery and invoicing. Investors should see lower regulatory tail‑risk for cross‑border revenues; product and finance teams should prioritize domestic tax compliance (GST) and update pricing/legal terms accordingly. Strategically, the pact signals a push toward codifying “borderless” digital commerce—expect similar bilateral carve‑outs to shape the next wave of streaming expansion and trade playbooks.
Read full article at broadcastandcablesat.co.in