Hollywood studios say China resumes payments after tax settlement
Cast member Robert Downey Jr. (L) smiles as he receives a huge birthday card with signatures from over …
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) -
China has agreed to resume payments owed to the U.S. film industry after
the two sides resolved a tax dispute, the Motion Picture Association of
America, a trade group for Hollywood studios, said on Tuesday.
The MPAA said the China Film
Group Corp, a state-owned distributor, had stopped payments to the
Hollywood studios because of problems with a new value-added tax applied
across China on August 1.
The MPAA did not say when the payments stopped, but the film trade
publication Variety said they might have been withheld as far back as
March and that the amount owed to Hollywood studios could exceed $200
million.
"We are pleased to hear that the
Chinese government has addressed the matter and all money due will be
paid in full," said MPAA chief executive and chairman Chris Dodd. "It is our understanding that the payment process has recommenced."
The Chinese group had wanted to deduct the tax from what the studios
earn in ticket sales in what is now the second-biggest film market.Under a 2012 agreement between the Chinese and U.S. governments, the American studios increased their share of revenue to 25 percent of the Chinese box office from a previous rate of between 13.5 percent and 17.5 percent.
Deducting the new tax would have cut the studios' take by 2 percentage points.
Prior to the 2012 agreement, U.S. studios had long complained of China's tight restrictions on foreign films, which they said helped fuel demand for pirated DVDs that are widely available in China.
(Reporting By Mary Milliken; Editing by Xavier Briand)
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