Category: Ireland

Can the EU tame the multi-national tax dodgers? Why Europe wants to turn the screw on the big guns

The screw is being turned on American companies that use complex structures to whittle down their tax bills. But is the latest EU probe a paper tiger or a game changer? It was supposed to be good news. Amazon’s announcement yesterday that it would hire 1,000 staff was dressed up… – Continue reading

UPDATE 3-Ireland calls time on austerity, “Double Irish” tax dodge

* Ireland to end tax regime that saved multinationals billions * Swift upturn ushers in tax cuts rather than austerity * Government faces backlash over uneven nature of recovery (Adds finance minister interview, Google comment) By Padraic Halpin and Conor Humphries DUBLIN, Oct 14 (Reuters) – Ireland will phase out… – Continue reading

Swiss pledge to review business taxation

The Swiss finance minister, Eveline Widmer-Schlumpf, and her counterparts from European Union member states have signed a joint statement aimed at ending a controversy over corporate taxes. The declaration, signed in Luxembourg on Tuesday, includes the Swiss government’s plans to push ahead with abolishing certain preferential tax regimes for foreign… – Continue reading

Bono: ‘We are a tiny country and tax laws have brought Ireland the only prosperity we’ve ever known

U2 frontman Bono has claimed that the controversial tax laws which have helped multinationals avoid billions in tax have “brought our country the only prosperity we’ve known”. In an interview with the Observer, the singer said the Irish economy needs companies like Apple, Facebook and Google, which have been the… – Continue reading

Ireland Said to Weigh Phasing Out Double Irish Tax Break

Ireland’s finance ministry officials are weighing phasing out a tax device used by multinational companies including Google Inc., according to a person with knowledge of the matter, as the European Union looks into the practice. Ireland is considering whether to eliminate a technique known as the “Double Irish,” which allows… – Continue reading

European Commission Crackdown on Special Tax Deals

The European Commission’s recent action to crack down on special deals some European Union governments offer to corporations could be a blow to multinational corporations’ tax-dodging strategies. As we noted in a report earlier this year, three European countries (Ireland, Luxembourg and the Netherlands) are among the top twelve tax… – Continue reading

Brussels in crackdown on ‘double Irish’ tax loophole

High quality global journalism requires investment. Please share this article with others using the link below, do not cut & paste the article. See our Ts&Cs and Copyright Policy for more detail. Email ftsales.support@ft.com to buy additional rights. http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/ba95cff0-4fcd-11e4-a0a4-00144feab7de.html#ixzz3G77zeNBz Brussels is challenging the “double Irish” tax avoidance measure prized by big US tech… – Continue reading

EU turns its attention to Amazon

European body adds another high-profile name to its crackdown on multinationals’ tax avoidance in bloc. The European Union is broadening its crackdown on multinationals’ tax avoidance schemes, opening an investigation yesterday into Amazon’s practices on suspicion the online retailer is not paying its dues on profits made across the 28-nation… – Continue reading

Medtronic To Go Ahead With Covidien Deal Despite Reduced Tax Benefits

Medtronic announced last week that it will go ahead with its Covidien buyout despite a recent notification by the U.S. Department of the Treasury and the Internal Revenue Service discouraging tax-avoiding corporate inversion deals. Per the new guidelines, companies will not be able to avoid paying U.S. taxes when accessing… – Continue reading

US Tax Inversion Planners Respond To Treasury Measures

The non-legislative measures put forward by the Treasury Department on September 22, to deter multinationals from using corporate inversions to move their tax residence abroad and move away from the high United States tax rate, have so far produced a mixed bag of results. The measures are aimed at preventing… – Continue reading

Amazon faces European Union tax avoidance investigation

Amazon, the online retailer, is to face a formal investigation into its European corporate tax practices, the European Commission has announced. The Commission – the executive division of the 28-member European Union – says it will look at the tax agreement made between Amazon and Luxembourg. It suspects the deal… – Continue reading

State aid: Commission investigates transfer pricing arrangements on corporate taxation of Amazon in Luxembourg

The European Commission has opened an in-depth investigation to examine whether the decision by Luxembourg’s tax authorities with regard to the corporate income tax to be paid by Amazon in Luxembourg comply with the EU rules on state aid. The opening of an in-depth investigation gives interested third parties and… – Continue reading

Ireland’s tax regime nurtures innovation in avoidance

A tax-based industrial policy will not produce an innovative economy, writes James Stewart High quality global journalism requires investment. Please share this article with others using the link below, do not cut & paste the article. See our Ts&Cs and Copyright Policy for more detail. Email ftsales.support@ft.com to buy additional rights. http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/bde702e4-4d5e-11e4-bf60-00144feab7de.html#ixzz3HKJXRQha Irish… – Continue reading

Washington resists Hockey’s tax crackdown on Silicon Valley giants

OHN KEHOE The global tax plan being pursued by Australia as G20 president, to compel low-tax paying multinationals such as Google and Apple to ­contribute more revenue to government coffers, could be derailed by political resistance in the United States. A prominent US senator in congress who would likely become… – Continue reading

Bernard Hickey: War on the high-tech dodgers

We pay our taxes. Why won’t they? It’s the topic every tax official and finance minister in the developed world is talking about and acting on, yet we hear little about it in New Zealand. Cracking down on tax avoidance by the world’s biggest technology companies – among them Google,… – Continue reading

How Apple’s Cork HQ became the centre of a bitter global war over corporate tax avoidance

The Californian corporation is Cork’s largest private employer, but has not won over all local hearts and minds. Now the city is at the heart of a fight over taxation that involves not just Ireland but also the European commission and the US senate Anger is mounting in Cork. The… – Continue reading

The European Commission Opens an Investigation into Transfer Pricing Practices

On Tuesday, September 30, 2014, the European Commission (the Commission) published its decision to open an investigation intoIreland’s transfer pricing practices.  The Commission is also reviewing the transfer pricing practices of other EU Member States, including the Netherlands and Luxembourg.  Any advanced pricing agreement (APA) or other tax ruling within the EU… – Continue reading

European Commission extends probe into Gibraltar’s corporate tax regime

The European Commission has extended the scope of its investigation into whether Gibraltar’s corporate tax regime favors certain companies, in breach of EU state aid rules. Related Stories Brussels to accuse Apple over illegal Irish tax deals: FT Reuters EU says Ireland swapped Apple tax deal for jobs Reuters EU watchdog to… – Continue reading

Osborne bid to fight tax avoidance ‘may empty, not swell, state coffers’

British chancellor George Osborne’s promise to clamp down on a tax avoidance loophole widely used by multinational technology companies could actually result in a reduction in the amount of money the government takes in, the Chartered Institute of Taxation has warned. Patrick Stevens, the group’s tax policy director, admitted the… – Continue reading

Gideon Spanier: At last, Europe is targeting the tech giants on tax

American technology companies are suddenly living in fear. European governments are finally standing up to the power of these giants that are happy to talk about the benefits their digital products and services bring to society while being accused of not paying their fair share of corporation tax, not doing… – Continue reading

EU’s investigation into Fiat deal an ‘all-out attack’ on Luxembourg’s tax practices

BRUSSELS : The European Union’s tax investigation of Luxembourg focuses on a single unit of the Italian auto company Fiat. But the implications of the inquiry could in some ways be more far-reaching for multinational companies and their tax accounting than the bloc’s separate Apple-Ireland inquiry, experts said Tuesday. “I… – Continue reading

Transfer pricing, tax evaders and IT: HMRC UK to assist FBR on tax reform initiatives

Her Majesty’s Revenue and Customs (HMRC) UK will assist Federal Board of Revenue (FBR) on tax and customs reform initiatives encompassing development of special skills to identify cases of transfer pricing, techniques to catch tax evaders and use of IT to control tax avoidance. It is learnt on Monday that the… – Continue reading

It’s Very Difficult To See How George Osborne’s Google Tax Could Possibly Be Legal

George Osborne, the Chancellor of the Exchequer over here in the UK, has just announced at the Conservative party conference that he’ll be changing the tax laws to make sure that Google GOOGL +0.16% and other tech multinationals (Facebook, Microsoft MSFT -0.17%, possibly Apple AAPL +0.64%, among them) end up… – Continue reading

Crackdown on Apple in Ireland Opens Front in Tax Avoidance War

The European Commission’s crackdown on the deal between Irish tax authorities and Apple Inc. marks an expansion in the growing global war on tax avoidance by multinational companies. Governments that enable it are now a target. Tuesday, the European Commission said the Irish tax authorities failed to conform to international… – Continue reading

EU says Ireland swapped Apple tax deal for jobs

The European Union has accused Ireland of swerving international tax rules by letting Apple shelter profits worth tens of billions of dollars from revenue collectors in return for maintaining jobs. European Competition Commissioner Joaquin Almunia told the Dublin government in a letter published on Tuesday that tax deals agreed in… – Continue reading

Apple’s foreign tax rate tumbled after 2007 Irish ‘advanced opinion’

The European Commission is expected to announce today that Apple, now one of the world’s biggest listed companies, got special treatment from the Irish authorities, when the American company sought assurances on tax issues in 1991 and 2007 – – from the latter year, Apple’s foreign tax rate tumbled compared… – Continue reading

Europe to probe Apple further over Irish tax deals

European regulators are set to examine whether Apple violated EU law by striking special tax deals with the Irish government. The European Commission opened an initial investigation into Apple’s tax affairs in June, looking at whether the company’s two percent tax rate in Ireland — far less than the standard 12.5… – Continue reading

Osborne plans crackdown on tech groups with new anti-avoidance rules

High quality global journalism requires investment. Please share this article with others using the link below, do not cut & paste the article. See our Ts&Cs and Copyright Policy for more detail. Email ftsales.support@ft.com to buy additional rights. http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/f0564d62-4803-11e4-b5ad-00144feab7de.html#ixzz3EsBYd5vW Technology companies “that go to extraordinary lengths” to cut their tax… – Continue reading

Osborne vows crackdown on tax-avoiding tech firms

(Reuters) – British finance minister George Osborne said on Monday he was examining changes to clamp down on tax avoidance by multinationals which the government says are depriving Britain’s public coffers of hundreds of millions of pounds each year. “Some technology companies go to extraordinary lengths to pay little or… – Continue reading

Court seeks clarification on tax evasion by Internet companies

The Delhi High Court has sought clarification from the Union Government on the issue of tax evasion by Internet companies with regard to their business operations in the country. The Court also asked whether the recipients of services would be liable to pay tax if the service provider was outside… – Continue reading

Another view: Low tax rates no way to build economy

Canada should not count on building its economy by luring U.S. multinationals over the border with low tax rates in light of an announcement from the U.S. Treasury Department this week. The department outlined new measures to block companies from escaping U.S. taxes by moving earnings outside the country. This… – Continue reading

The Obama administration’s tougher rules on offshore corporate inversions had…

Stricter tax inversion rules punish stocks of firms mulling such moves. The Obama administration’s tougher rules on offshore corporate inversions had an immediate effect Tuesday, pushing down the stock prices of companies considering such moves.But the highly technical changes to the tax code di Stricter tax inversion rules punish stocks… – Continue reading

Minecraft, Nokia, Skype: How Microsoft Buys Overseas Companies To Avoid US Taxes

Nokia, Skype and Minecraft-maker Mojang have more in common than just the fact that they are among Microsoft’s biggest acquisition targets in recent years. They are all also based outside the U.S., and that’s no coincidence. As the debate over so-called inversions heats up and critics — from President Obama… – Continue reading

Treasury’s Inversion Rules Create Uncertain Environment For US Multinational Companies

The Obama administration’s new rules intended to stem the tide of inversions, in which U.S. companies reincorporate abroad to dodge taxes at home, won’t be completely effective because they don’t address the high corporate tax rate in the U.S. that compels such behavior, say tax experts and analysts. The rules announced… – Continue reading

Twitter accounts point to UK sales heading offshore

Twitter is funnelling much of the revenue it generates in Britain through an offshore sales structure, newly published annual accounts suggested today. Twitter UK has filed abbreviated 2013 accounts for a small company under Companies House rules, which are usually applicable to a business with an annual turnover of less… – Continue reading

New US Tax Rules Chill ‘Inversion’ Deal-Making

WASHINGTON/NEW YORK, Sept 23, (Agencies): Tough new US rules on corporate “inversions” on Tuesday sent a chill through the market for the tax-avoidance deals, both pending and potential, with share prices falling sharply in nearly a dozen companies on both sides of the Atlantic. As investors sold stocks involved in inversions,… – Continue reading

Everything That’s Wrong with the US Tax System in One Chart

Last week the Tax Foundation released its annual International Tax Competitiveness Index for 2014. The United States ranked 32 out of 34 OECD countries surveyed. Only Portugal and France got lower competitiveness scores, and not by much. As if that were not bad enough, the competitiveness score is only half… – Continue reading

U.S. Treasury moves against tax-avoidance ‘inversion’ deals

(Reuters) – Moving against tax avoidance by corporations, the Obama administration took several actions on Monday to curb “inversion” deals that allow companies to escape high U.S. taxes by reincorporating abroad. The Treasury Department announced new rules, effective immediately, that will reduce the tax benefits available to companies that have… – Continue reading

Pressure rises to close tax loopholes

Plans to curb tax avoidance will hit Ireland. Most countries are set to force multinationals to pay more tax and as the political controversy grows, our own role in these activities will come under ever increasing scrutiny On Tuesday the OECD, the Paris-based club of the world’s richest economies, published… – Continue reading

Big economies take aim at the firms running circles around their taxmen

POLITICIANS in the rich world like to splutter about the ever more elaborate dodges that big multinational firms undertake to minimise their tax bills. But doing something about them is trickier. America’s Congress is struggling to agree on ways to stop companies “inverting”—switching domicile to reduce tax bills (see article)…. – Continue reading