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Apple Owes Ireland $14.5 Billion In Taxes, European Commission Says
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Contributor | IndyGeorgia |
Last Edited | IndyGeorgia Aug 31, 2016 06:44pm |
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Category | Legal Ruling |
Author | Camila Domonoske |
News Date | Tuesday, August 30, 2016 12:00:00 PM UTC0:0 |
Description | The European Union's executive branch has found that Ireland granted unfair and illegal tax breaks to the tech giant Apple, and ruled that Apple now owes more than $14.5 billion in back taxes.
The commissioner in charge of competition policy, Margrethe Vestager, says that under EU rules, "Member states cannot give tax benefits to selected companies."
But the European Commission found that Ireland allowed Apple — which has two companies incorporated in Ireland, Apple Sales International and Apple Operations Europe — to pay far less in taxes than other companies did.
On top of that, the commission says, Apple chose to record all sales in the EU as sales in Ireland, allowing that low rate to apply to all sales in the entire EU single market.
In 2003, Apple paid Ireland an effective tax rate of 1 percent on European profits, the commission says. By 2014, that had dropped to 0.005 percent.
The country's corporate tax rate, in general, is 12.5 percent, Reuters reports.
The EU says the illegal tax breaks began in 1991. But it can order recovery only of "illegal state aid" — which is what the EU considers those tax breaks to be — from 2003 to 2014.
The commission says Ireland must now collect 13 billion euros (some $14.5 billion), plus interest, from Apple. The final tax bill could be lower if Apple decides to pay taxes to other countries, or funnel more of its profit to its U.S. companies. |
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