Today.Az » World news » EU could force global giants like Google and Facebook to reveal tax affairs
08 February 2016 [13:08] - Today.Az
Google, Facebook and other major multinational companies
could be forced to disclose how much money they make and how much they pay in
tax in Europe, according to a report. Draft legislation by the European Union’s executive is due
to be tabled in April, sources told The Guardian. It comes amid anger at the low rates of tax paid by many
large companies. Last month, Google agreed with the HM Revenue and Customs
that it
would pay £130m in tax for the last 10 years – a deal Chancellor
George Osborne championed as a “major
success”. However Shadow Chancellor John McDonnell dismissed the
amount as “mates rates”, adding “rumour has it that similar deals could be
offered to Facebook and Amazon”. The legislation proposed by the EU would remove the
guesswork. A source said that EU officials “are currently finalising
the impact assessment work. It’s likely there will be some form of legislative
initiative announced for the beginning of April … for public country-by-country
reporting”. Another insider said: “It will likely target the large
multinationals, all multinationals and not just EU ones.” The impact assessment “really swayed opinion” among
officials, the source added. John Christensen, of Tax Justice Network, welcomed the move. “For a very long time big companies have been saying their
tax affairs are a matter of competitive confidentiality,” he said. “We think it
is incredibly important as a matter of principle that this information is made
public.” But Tove Maria Ryding, of the European Network on Debt and
Development , told the Guardian that a key factor would be which firms were
covered by the law. She said if it was restricted to companies with a turnover
of more than €750m, this would mean 85 per cent of the world’s multinationals
would not be affected.
“That would obviously be a very big problem,” she said. “If
you want to have a situation where small and medium-sized enterprises who don’t
use these tax structures can compete, then we can’t leave 85 per cent of the
multinationals with very obvious loopholes that mean that they can avoid
taxation.” /By The Independent/
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