Russia May Force Apple To Reduce Its App Store Tax To 20% (pcmag.com) 87
A new bill submitted as draft legislation to Russia's lower house of parliament wants to see the commission taken by app store owners limited to just 20 percent. The change would impact both Apple and Google's app stores, but any other that operate within Russia. PCMag reports: It sounds like a great move for app developers, but the bill goes further and stipulates that developers would be required to pay 30 percent of their app income to a special IT training fund. So rather than losing 30 percent to Apple, developers would be losing 50 percent in total -- 20 percent to Apple and 30 percent to this new training fund. If the bill passes, it would surely see a large influx of cash into the training fund, but could also result in developers opting not to offer their apps to the Russian market in future. There's little incentive to if 50 percent of your app charge goes to other people. Alternatively, it could see app prices increase in Russia to compensate for the change. Apple also wouldn't be very happy, but there's little it could do if the bill passes into law.
Not a tax (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Not a tax (Score:4, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Apple is bigger than most governments. Has more power too.
Something entirely irrelevant to the discussion since the definition of "tax" has zero to do with size.
Re: Not a tax (Score:1)
I will do you one further. A TAX is something levied by the House of Representatives or State Government. Those charges on your phone bill levied by the FCC are FEES. As they lack the authority to levy a tax.
Re: (Score:2)
RTFA... they're trying to get the fee cut from 30% to 20%... but also instating a new 30% tax for training, meaning app store participants would only get 50%.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: Not a tax (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
The monopoloes bother people. The brand matter very little.
From the Google FAQ for Android developers:
There is noting special about Apple in this regard and I'd be more inclined to agree with you if I actually saw people handing out criticism across the board than just singling out Apple because the problem is way bigger than Apple's assholery. However, hardly anybody ever shows up here shrieking about the Goo
Re: (Score:2)
The only reason to single out Apple is to make it simpler to understand by non-technical people. They understand what an iPhone is. They barely understand what Google Play is or that it has anything to do with the apps on a Samsung or Motorola phone.
Any regulation that comes as a result can't single out a company by name anyway (in the US).
Re: (Score:2)
Just a gambit claim to scare the crap out of businesses so the final claim wont seem so bad and likely if they pay for training directly, they wont have to pay that charge. The Russian government leveraging developers and tech corporations to spend more money on training.
Kind of smart, either spend a percentage of income on training, or spend that on a government charge, so government can spend it on training. Also put some protections in for developers, so they do not feel so bad about paying for training
Re: (Score:2)
Re: Not a tax (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:3)
So they lack the authority to levy a tax, but have the authority to levy a tax by re-labeling it a fee? So basically they only lack the authority to call their required payments a tax.
Re: (Score:2)
Of course it's a fee. That's not the point. People call it a "tax" as a form of satire, comparing Apple to a tax-heavy government.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
This has nothing to do with "their app stor
Re: (Score:2)
OK, how much is rent?
Re: Keep going (Score:2)
That is because if they were higher people would not use real estate agents. The market figures these things out quite well.
Re: Keep going (Score:3)
Its like the fuckwads that want servers to be tipped 20 and 25%. Its a fucking percentage. If you want to ear more just upsell the shit to raise the check, and occasionally raise prices to keep up with costs. 15% is sufficient. Plent of sales persons who get a lot less than 15%. Car salesman dont get 15% commission. Yet the can still do quite well. Upsell. Drinks are the fastest way to double your check and often get a higher than 15% bonus.
Car salesman don't make $2.13/hr (Score:2)
Car salesman don't make $2.13/hr
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
im not a care salesman but based on their base salary and time worked, its not a lot more. there are plenty of 1099 salesmen out there. Many servers lie about their tips and only pay taxes on the bare minimum. If you take home $500 per night in tips, then I could give a shit about whining about percentages. Of course you are not going to make $500/night working at a greasy spoon. But do you really think the servers working in restaurants that have plates starting at $35 per person are going broke? How much
Re: (Score:2)
Car salesmen are going to make their percentage on a much bigger sale too.
Re: (Score:2)
It does. And, if there were competition for App Stores on the iPhone, it might not be such an issue.
Re: (Score:2)
There is competition. It's called Android. No one is forced to use Apple's business model. Customers use it because it they like it and developers use it because it's profitable. It's a win-win situation.
Maybe I should sue Epic because I'm not allowed to sell my own add-ons for Fortnite. After all, they have a monopoly on the Fortnite add-on market.
Re: (Score:2)
There is competition. It's called Android.
There's an expression about being stuck between a rock and a hard place that might be applicable.
One thing's for sure, Apple isn't acting like there's any real competition.
Re: (Score:2)
You should be allowed to sell your own add-ons for a game. What's stopping you?
Also, it's pretty obvious to everyone that Apple has abused its market position in numerous ways. Why defend bad behavior?
Re: (Score:3)
Re: (Score:2)
I think that wins the prize for worst analogy ever made on this site. It's so divorced from the subject that it can hardly be called an analogy!
Re: (Score:2)
Then I think you have failed to see the point
Big Macs are McDonald's IP. The fact that other companies, such as Burger King aren't allowed to compete with McDonald's by also selling Big Macs should be unsurprising
iOS is Apple's IP. The fact that other companies are not allowed to decide what terms should apply to applications that run on iOS should be equally unsurprising.
The bottom line is that the only person that is locking themselves into dealing with the app store is the customer who decides t
Re: (Score:2)
Stores make margins. They're not zero-cost, nor are they zero-value; why should they have zero revenue?
Since you seem to be saying that you'd rather get 30% of $1.99 than 2% of $500,000 and are willfully ignoring the per-transaction overheads, relative scale of the business, and the fact that Apple/Google/Valve etc. pay all currency conversions and tax obligations from their cut; you can excuse me while I go back to not taking your position on capitalist economics or international retail seriously.
Re: (Score:2)
Credit card networks already exist. We know that the cost of facilitating the money exchange, including fraud and chargebacks add up to a single-digit percentage of overhead. Since they also take credit cards, we can double it to maybe 6-7% for their cut. Even 10-15% is not outrageous for the service provided. But 30% is outright usurious.
I'll agree that comparing to auto or real estate commissions is ridiculous.
Re: (Score:2)
But when your app is 1.99USD and somebody in Australia buys it for 2.49AUD based on Apple's baseline price tier conversions, Apple still pays the Australian sales tax and GST due on that. Apple administer the international business and tax obligations for doing business in every jurisdiction. When the AUD falls by 25% against the USD because of a slump in domestic mining exports, Apple just absorb that cost.
Global digital sales aren't just a matter of processing money; and wouldn't be even _if_ credit card
Re: (Score:2)
Real-estate commission starts at 3.5%, but is generally 5-6%. A typical realtor will spend about 0.2% to get their share of around 1-2%, so 30% commission is actually in line for Apple if you peg their transaction costs at 3% and appreciate that most of the “sales” generate no commission.
Russia is useless (Score:4, Interesting)
Doubt Apple cares about losing sales to Russia. They'll just pull out of Russia. Now if China were to pull out, they'd be in shit. But that's unlikely to happen as long as their politicians are happy .. unless they start getting greedy en masse.
Re:Russia is useless (Score:4, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: Russia is useless (Score:5, Funny)
If china knew how to -pull out- they would not have 3 billion people. ;-)
Re: (Score:2)
Some might argue the idea that "pulling out" is an effective form of birth control is the way to quickly get to 3bn people.
Re: Russia is useless (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Apple's future in China depends on what Trump does regarding Chinese apps like TikTok and WeChat.
https://twitter.com/zlj517/sta... [twitter.com]
WTF? (Score:4, Interesting)
"The change would impact both Apple and Google's app stores, but * any other that operate within Russia."
After the BUT there's a word missing, either NOT or ALSO.
Grammar - Do You Get It?! (Score:1)
Or possibly "The change would impact NOT ONLY Apple and Google's app stores but any other(S) that operate within Russia"
Re: (Score:2)
FYI: Your title makes it sound like you're contradicting the OP (and being a dick about it), which is probably why you got modded troll. I had to do a double take of your post to realize you were agreeing with him. I thought it was rather ironic since the point of both posts was to highlight how a reckless use of language can cause misinterpretations.
LIKE HELL there's little they could do (Score:1)
They could liberate the hardware so that people could use their own computers, however they want, without having to go through anyone's store. 50% of 0 rubles is 0. (How much does Russia charge Ubuntu or Debian for allowing users to use the repo?)
Bigger gangster says to the littler gangster (Score:2)
no, you take the small cut and kick the big cut up to me.
Incentive to do what? (Score:2)
What is going to happen if 100,000 Russian app developers are given an incentive to side load apps?
Re: (Score:2)
APK'S hosts file engine?
in Soviet Russia... (Score:4, Funny)
Pay Interns (Score:2)
The fund can be set up such that any company who pay this 30% fee on hiring a summer intern can bill the entire salary of the intern to this fund. Also 50% of salary of anyone with less than 2 yrs experience for the first 2 years at the company. This will lead companies to do more of their development in Russia. Use the market power of the Russian customer to move production to Russia. Capitalism rocks.
Re: (Score:2)
The first 2 years out of college you are basically paid to learn which is why companies dont like hiring freshers. They would rather hire folks who have already learnt at someone else's expense. Which in the US means H1Bs who have learnt their trade in India on low salaries. Reduce the cost of hiring freshers by 50% while keeping the market value of the position constant and you get more freshers hired. After 2 years there will be a 200% jump in their cost but in most cases programmer productivity grows mor
will apple let people price higher there / change (Score:2)
will apple let people price higher there / change more on apple store vs they non apple sales
Automatically! (Score:2)
Apple has developers charge tiers for their apps. Those tiers then equate roughly so tier N is N USD, but the translations to local conditions (things are cheaper in developing countries, etc.). So Apple could just raise rates in Russia to accommodate this law and all apps would get more expensive with no action from developers.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
I wonder how anyone in Russia thinks they could have any influence on a contract between me (UK) and Apple (USA).
Re: (Score:2)
Heard of Math? Logic? (Score:1)
50%? (Score:2)
There's little incentive to if 50 percent of your app charge goes to other people.
Or you raise your prices to cover it.
I remember back in the olden days of disks/CDs in boxes that the "wholesale" price of software was about half the "retail" price. So if you went and bought a box with "Marathon: Infinity" for $49.95, the store probably paid Bungie about $25 for it.
Russian shakedown (Score:3)
Pretty standard dictator behavior - a small burst of energy followed by a long diet of eating your country's seed corn because you don't really care what happens when you're gone. What's going on in Russia is textbook decline. So boring. The really interesting thing will be to see if China follows the same path or if they do something different. It should be obvious sometime around 2030. Xi's not long in the tooth..... yet. One can always hope they take the smart road.
Apple should simply call their bluff. All Apple really has to do is pull out entirely and make sure that even the elites can't use their iDevices within Russia. The pushback will be hard and fast. Putin has to keep the upper crust happy or he'll wind up drinking his own little dose of Novichok or polonium. It's Russia, after all.
Re: (Score:1)
Yeah, someone in office for over 20 years, with decades more in other government positions, definitely doesn't care what happens when they are gone. Especially if they are as welcome as Putin in every other country in the world for their retirement... right on....
Also most seem to survive and lead productive lives afterward this Novichok super poison, you'd think it does nothing but give mild diarrhea. Obviously Putin must have pretty low IQ to keep using poison that quite literally never worked before....
Japanese tax (Score:4, Interesting)
I've been publishing apps for several years now.
There was a tax form that you could optionally complete and submit to Apple to request non-resident/non-tax exemption from Japan for all app sales in Japan.
It was something like 20% that Apple had to automatically deduct and hand over to Japan each month on all your sales within that country.
The tax form was only available in Japanese and could only be submitted once. (from googling researching it generally wasn't successful for those who submitted it)
After trying to have a go at it I gave up. I didn't get that much revenue from Japan and 20% of what I did get wasn't worth my time and effort.
Just looking now on App Store Connect I see no sign of Japanese tax options in my account. Things may have changed.
I can't see Russia being able to enforce a 20% max commission on anyones behalf other than their own home based app publishers.
Which may see Apple saying dasvidaniya to Russian based app developers.
"IT Training Fund". Yeah, right...
30%? I'll be un-checking the RU country availability box and saying dasvidaniya myself if I'm going to be paying for Tumusov's dacha re-modelling.
Tax? (Score:1)
Fake news (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
That sounds very reasonable. Good for consumers and developers alike. What's not to like?
Re: (Score:2)
Wow...2020 makes Russia sound like a better place to live than the US.
VAT, Distribution Costs, Operating Costs (Score:2)
This is going to kill a lot of distribution models.
When its split 70/30 there are distribution costs of airtime which can be upwards of 15%. Then there is VAT, lets say 15%, then there are your operating costs and then the appstore operating costs. Lets assume you set the operating costs at 5%. Before you've even started you are on 40% from the headline cost of the service deducted. If you can agree that the revshare is after VAT you are now on 25%. At 30% split you are squabbling over 5% profit betw
Re: (Score:2)
To clarify, when a mobile service is subsided and the customer pays from their airtime, the above applies.
When paying from credit card the distribution cost would be only the credit card costs if using a credit card.
Re: (Score:1)
Russia is a small economy (Score:1)
Apple will add a maintenance fee (Score:1)