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by cmdkeen 4716 days ago
You're missing a step though - which is that these corporations do everything possible to avoid paying the due tax on those foreign profits. I'm all in favour of getting to repatriate profits then - but taking the profits through a tax haven needs to be stopped first.

Take Google in the UK for instance. They don't "sell" anything in the UK according to their tax returns, so claim every deal is actually finalised through Ireland and therefore subject to lower Irish taxes. So their UK tax is minimal despite making large profits from there.

It provides a massive competitive advantage to companies large enough to full off these kind of operations. Google have possibly been caught out actually selling in the UK, but in most cases their conduct is legal - which is why the law needs changing.

If you want to make money in France, the UK, Germany or wherever you should pay local taxes to those countries. It would be grand if those situations could be simplified and made accessible for digital goods (which are more likely to be sold cross border).

3 comments

For those who'd like to know more about Tax Havens, how corporations use them and the effect they have, I can thoroughly recommend Nicholas Shaxon's book, Treasure Islands [1]. For example, I never really considered why all my Amazon purchases mention Luxembourg.

[1] http://www.amazon.com/Treasure-Islands-Uncovering-Offshore-B...

(Disclaimer: That's an affiliate link via my college library. Feel free to strip it if you don't like such things)

The problem with preventing the use of 'tax havens' is that there's no non-arbitrary way to decide if a company is truly using another country as a tax haven, or that they are actually using developers from another country. In the Google example, Google UK is clearly benefiting from the developers that work outside UK, therefore they should be able to pay 'brand fees' or whatnot to the 'main Google'.

Of course in this case most of the development is not happening in Ireland, but how can you decide if the fees are reasonable or not? You'll either end up with a very complex tax code with loopholes (which is non-desirable), or you'll give arbitrary power to tax bureaucrats to enforce arbitrary taxes to certain companies (and this will in practise create non-just tax decisions and corruption).

Of course in this case most of the development is not happening in Ireland

I'd say that very little (probably zero) development is done in Ireland, but I get the impression you think that development is the taxable activity (I don't know if it is or not). However, there are 1,700 people doing something in Ireland (from http://www.idaireland.com/google/index.xml, 1/2 way down):

A site reliability/engineering team supporting Google’s European hosting and search activities; Multilingual customer support for Google’s AdWords advertising product; On-line relevancy testing and Google product support; Shared Services to support Google’s EMEA operations.

As an Irish person, I'm getting a little weary of the constant references on HN implying that Ireland is little more than a tax haven. There is a significant number of jobs attached to the US multinational presence here, viz:

- Apple: 4000 employees (http://venturebeat.com/2013/05/22/ireland-were-no-tax-haven-...)

- eBay: 3000 (http://www.irishtimes.com/business/sectors/retail-and-servic...)

- Google: 1700 (see above)

- Facebook: 500 (http://www.irishtimes.com/business/sectors/technology/facebo...)

I could go on, but I have stuff to do, and I feel like I've already done more research than most journalists commenting on this area. For those interested, there's a list of foreign ICT companies operating in Ireland at http://www.idaireland.com/business-in-ireland/information-co...

Edit: Removed woe-is-me comment following a trigger-happy downvoter.

Google does not pay tax in Ireland either, even at low Irish rates. So while it is great that it employs people there and it might anyway, Ireland is integral to its tax evasion strategy, as is the Netherlands.
It doesn't pay very much (corporation tax), but it does pay: http://www.irishtimes.com/business/economy/ireland/google-de... - it took me 3 seconds to find this.
Sorry I didn't mean none but nowhere near what you would expect given this is the entire revenue from Europe.
Google was possibly a poor example as they aren't just using the brand fees but claiming they don't actually "sell" anything in the UK at all. Despite having lots of people in their London officer with sales type titles on LinkedIn...

I think the issue is that companies are currently able to get away with murder in terms of structuring debt and those brand type fees to funnel profits away. Some kind of "reasonableness" test certainly wouldn't go amiss when it comes to judging measures taken by companies. There's already a movement against measures taken solely for the purpose of tax avoidance.

> "The problem with preventing the use of 'tax havens' is that there's no non-arbitrary way to decide if a company is truly using another country as a tax haven..."

It doesn't matter whether a specific company uses tax havens or not. The problem is that tax havens exist (and there are reasonably good definitions of how to recognise one).

Companies, who's role is to maximise shareholder value/profits etc, will use them within the extent of the law. That means it's the laws that need to change.

> It doesn't matter whether a specific company uses tax havens or not.

The only reasons there are tax havens is because there are tax hells.

No. Tax havens exist because people (and companies) want to hide assets. That's independent of the existence of any tax 'hell'. Unless you're of the opinion that all taxation is bad (an opinion I disagree with).
No, if taxation was low enough, the hasle of putting your money in a tax havens wouldn't be worth the time, money and trouble. Tax havens and the accountants needed to set them up are far from being free. If companies could spend the millions they spend on setting up these schemes on a low flat tax rate instead it would be worth it for them even if they ended up paying a bit more than by putting the money in a tax haven because of the time being saved and the good publicity + the positive effect that reasonable low taxes have on the economy.
>> No, if taxation was low enough, the hasle of putting your money in a tax havens wouldn't be worth the time, money and trouble.

You can't practically lower taxes enough to compete with tax havens.

In general they have low populations and the companies don't actually do any major activity there (there are few societal costs), so the country can survive and thrive with a very low percentage tax take from many effectively non-resident companies.

Contrast this with countries that have much larger populations. The number of profitable corporations per capita is going to be lower than a country that attracts corporations in simply on the basis of their low tax rate.

You'll notice where countries like Ireland are involved, that do have a population to support, they seem to eventually regret the tax haven arrangements they agreed to in the good times.

>> If companies could spend the millions they spend on setting up these schemes on a low flat tax rate instead it would be worth it for them even if they ended up paying a bit more than by putting the money in a tax haven because of the time being saved and the good publicity + the positive effect that reasonable low taxes have on the economy.

You can't really believe this?

You are making a lot of assumptions in your post. Have you questioned any of them? How much it costs to set up a system to avoid tax? How tax havens actually came about? How corporates actually use them? The information is out there and there's at least one good book on the subject (Treasure Islands by Nick Shaxon).
It's not as simple as that. Suppose I run a company based in France employing 100 people and selling goods by mail order. All my operations are in France, so clearly I should pay my taxes in France. The only economic activity that occurs when I sell to someone in the UK is the postage delivery at the UK end. Your proposition is that I should pay UK taxes, but clearly I should definitely pay French taxes. So which do I pay, both? That's not a viable tax regime.

Trust me, if there was a simple way to fix this, it would be fixed.

It's definitively not as simple as your example. Both Amazon and Google have staff and infrastructure in UK and other European countries. Yet they channel all their profit to lower tax countries (Luxembourg for Amazon and Ireland for Google).

In the case of Amazon, when some sales staff is in the UK (evidence coming from whistleblowers, for instance http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2013/may/16/amazon-whis...), when warehouses are in the UK, and Luxembourg seems to be used only for signing the official contract, how is that not tax avoidance?

Of course what they're doing isn't as simple as my example. The point is you have to construct robust, enforceable and fair rules on an international basis that catch out Google et al on the one hand BUT also don't affect companies like the one I describe. The handwavey comments along the lines of "Just make them pay tax where they sell their stuff" like the one I relied to are less than helpful in this regard.
Suppose I run a company based in France employing 100 people and selling goods by mail order. All my operations are in France, so clearly I should pay my taxes in France.

I don't think anyone would have a problem with that. The problem is running your operations in France, supplying to customers in the UK, but declaring all of your profits in The Democratic People's Republic of South West Nowhere (corporation tax rate: 0.075%) where your corporate headquarters (head count: 1 lawyer (PT), 1 accountant, 3 board members who also sit on the board of 97 other businesses run by that lawyer and that accountant) is based.