|
|
|
|
|
by BenjaminDyer
4939 days ago
|
|
With the UK being the biggest userbase in the EU for Dropbox its a shame they've decided to open up in Dublin, as my accountant would say its a good "tax optimisation" strategy. Sure, hate the game not the player, but they could have scored some major plus points on the day Public Accounts Committee in the UK have poured scorn on Google, Amazon and Starbucks: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-20559791 |
|
Setting aside those companies that deal in 'hard goods' (e.g. Amazon-the-store, Starbucks, etc), could someone explain the rationale of taxation w.r.t. corporate domicile?
Say I offer a software-based service in the U.S. (i.e. all the servers, billing, admin, dev, etc are done there), and by dint of luck/happenstance, a majority of the userbase ends up being in the EU. I (or my ISP) or my customers (or their ISP) are paying for the pipe between us (which is presumably taxed however the relevant localities have chosen); beyond that, I am not benefiting from any government services in the EU.
Should I nevertheless pay taxes in the EU (perhaps proportionately to each member nation based on the mix of nationalities of my userbase)? When I set up a European office, shall I be shamed into setting up HQ in whatever country houses the majority of my customers that year? What happens when that mix changes such that the majority of my customers are in a different nation?
All of this sounds absurd, but it sounds like the standard (or something similar to it) being applied to Dropbox in this case.