ChatterBank1 min ago
Amazon weasel
Just been watching the Public Accounts Committee asking the Amazon representative questions about tax - what a display of weasel words by a weasel-faced executive. He's got no facts to hand despite knowing full well about the intentions of the committee, and couldn't appear more shifty if he was head of a criminal gang.
Do the tax avoidance actions of Amazon or other companies make you think twice about using them for purchases?
Do the tax avoidance actions of Amazon or other companies make you think twice about using them for purchases?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Actually, they do - rather irritatingly for me, since I like the service that amazon offers, especially for kindle.
I have made a conscious decision to boycott these brands that are specifically mentioned, for what its worth - but whats really needed is a fundamental rethink of how taxation is applied and gathered for multinational corporations. I am sure that all their current tax arrangements to correspond to the letter of the law, and that is what is so frustrating.
It would I imagine seem fair to most that companies pay tax based upon their turnover and profit in a specific market, rather than passing the profit over to a subsidiary company based in a low tax haven.
The problem is finding a method by which you can enforce this, and that needs some expertise to sort it out.
I have made a conscious decision to boycott these brands that are specifically mentioned, for what its worth - but whats really needed is a fundamental rethink of how taxation is applied and gathered for multinational corporations. I am sure that all their current tax arrangements to correspond to the letter of the law, and that is what is so frustrating.
It would I imagine seem fair to most that companies pay tax based upon their turnover and profit in a specific market, rather than passing the profit over to a subsidiary company based in a low tax haven.
The problem is finding a method by which you can enforce this, and that needs some expertise to sort it out.
No more than the BBC paying the chief exec half a million retirement makes me stop watching BBC. Companies have been avoiding tax since the beginning of...well...tax. Because they don't pay tax they have money to pay...lawyers. To cover up for them paying tax. So if you want to buck the system: be a lawyer.
As others have said, abhorrent though there actions may be to many they aren't breaking the law.
I do find it diabolical though when MP's are sitting in judgement over 'moral' issues, particularly in light of what many of them were up to over expenses, second homes and more recently computer scams.
It's up to the MP's to close these legal loopholes. I saw on Sky News earlier that the French are already taking retrospective action against Amazon and are presenting them with a bill somewhere in the region of £250 million.
It's a start!
I do find it diabolical though when MP's are sitting in judgement over 'moral' issues, particularly in light of what many of them were up to over expenses, second homes and more recently computer scams.
It's up to the MP's to close these legal loopholes. I saw on Sky News earlier that the French are already taking retrospective action against Amazon and are presenting them with a bill somewhere in the region of £250 million.
It's a start!
I agree with chilldoubt, and share your sense of outrage at the sight of MPs routinely fiddling their expenses - but, setting the context, they were a drop in the ocean compared to the amount of corporation tax that is being avoided by these multinationals.
And its a genuinely complicated issue - Chains like Starbucks for example, employ thousands of people in the UK, and collect on behalf of HMRC millions in PAYE and NI contributions, and corporate profit from declared turnover may well be affected by investment and capital costs through a large expansion programme, for instance.
Even taking that into account, however, many of the accountants who have commentated on this issue highlight the funnelling of turnover to small subsidiaries in places like Luxembourg, and it is clearly an avoidance technique, however much these companies might publically protest to the contrary.
I do not know what the answer is, but it does need urgent attention -and I will follow the progress of Frances demand with interest, although it is by no means certain to succeed.
And its a genuinely complicated issue - Chains like Starbucks for example, employ thousands of people in the UK, and collect on behalf of HMRC millions in PAYE and NI contributions, and corporate profit from declared turnover may well be affected by investment and capital costs through a large expansion programme, for instance.
Even taking that into account, however, many of the accountants who have commentated on this issue highlight the funnelling of turnover to small subsidiaries in places like Luxembourg, and it is clearly an avoidance technique, however much these companies might publically protest to the contrary.
I do not know what the answer is, but it does need urgent attention -and I will follow the progress of Frances demand with interest, although it is by no means certain to succeed.
ChillDoubt
/// They have to make sure their own house is squeaky clean before going to clean someone elses! ///
Couldn't agree more, how completely hypocritical of those MPs sitting round the table, why was it we didn't witness them sitting before such a 'tribunal' explaining their expences, along with all the other high-flyers and celebrities, who stash their millions away in 'off-shore' places.
/// They have to make sure their own house is squeaky clean before going to clean someone elses! ///
Couldn't agree more, how completely hypocritical of those MPs sitting round the table, why was it we didn't witness them sitting before such a 'tribunal' explaining their expences, along with all the other high-flyers and celebrities, who stash their millions away in 'off-shore' places.
An interesting article commenting on the appearance of Starbucks et al before the Public Accounts Committee.
http:// www.tax researc ...-of- monday- afterno on/
These companies can give no logical explanation for their record of low corporation tax payments. They have lost any moral capital they may have had, and some of the arrangements exposed by the questioning demonstrates the link between these multinationals and tax havens in and around europe.
Greater transparency, country by country sales, turnover and profit figures are necessary.
One of the most egregious examples of this tax avoidance comes from Amazon UK - a company whose customers are entirely within the UK, whose warehousing and distribution is within the UK, who make use of delivery services within the UK reports its profits and pays its corporation tax in Luxembourg!
http://
These companies can give no logical explanation for their record of low corporation tax payments. They have lost any moral capital they may have had, and some of the arrangements exposed by the questioning demonstrates the link between these multinationals and tax havens in and around europe.
Greater transparency, country by country sales, turnover and profit figures are necessary.
One of the most egregious examples of this tax avoidance comes from Amazon UK - a company whose customers are entirely within the UK, whose warehousing and distribution is within the UK, who make use of delivery services within the UK reports its profits and pays its corporation tax in Luxembourg!
And as I mentioned yesterday...
http:// www.fox busines ...o-am azon-ow e-us-25 2m/
(Apologies that it's from Fox, theirs was the first article that came up via a search!)
I trust we'll see similar from our own government!
http://
(Apologies that it's from Fox, theirs was the first article that came up via a search!)
I trust we'll see similar from our own government!