The
BBC has an
article about
Apple's Irish tax problems:
Apple chief executive Tim Cook (photo) says the European Commission ruling that Apple should pay billions of euros in back taxes to the Republic of Ireland is "maddening" and "political".
He told Irish broadcaster RTE (go here to hear his speech) that Apple had not been given preferential tax breaks in Ireland. The European Union ruling said Apple had been given thirteen billion euros of "illegal" tax benefits.
Cook said he was "very confident" the ruling would be overturned on appeal.
Speaking about the ruling, Cook told RTE: "It's maddening, it's disappointing, it's clear that this comes from a political place, it has no basis in fact or in law, and unfortunately it's one of those things we have to work through. When you're accused of doing something that is so foreign to your values, it brings out an outrage in you, and that's how we feel. Apple has always been about doing the right thing. We haven't done anything wrong, and the Irish government hasn't done anything wrong."
Cook disputed the Commission's finding that Apple had effectively paid a corporate tax rate of just 0.005%, or €50 out of every €1m, from one of its Ireland-based subsidiaries in 2014. "It's a false number. I have no idea where that number came from. It is not true. Here is the truth. In that year, we paid four hundred million dollars to Ireland, and that amount of money was based on the statutory Irish income tax rate of 12.5%."
However, the European Commission said the rate of 0.005% applied to one of Apple's subsidiaries.
Apple Sales International made research payments totaling two billion dollars to its parent, Apple Inc., in 2011, which significantly increased in 2014, the Commission said.
"Apple paid an effective tax rate of 0.005% in 2014 on the profits of Apple Sales International. Apple has more subsidiaries in Ireland, as indicated in the Commission's decision to open an investigation. The tax affairs of other Apple subsidiaries, be it in Ireland or elsewhere, have not been the focus of this investigation," it said.
Commissioner Margrethe Vestager said: "This is a decision based on the facts of the case, looking into Apple Sales International, how they are arranged within Ireland and, with the profit recorded there, how they're taxed."
But Apple said it was the largest corporate taxpayer in Ireland in 2014.
Cook said Apple paid income tax on products sold in different European countries to those countries, and an additional income taxes on profits in the US at a rate of 35%.
In addition, Apple has provisioned "several billion dollars" from its profits in 2014 to be repatriated to the US, he said. "Right now I would forecast that repatriation to occur next year. It's not true that we paid just four hundred million dollars, or even just eight hundred million dollars to Ireland and the US combined, the number is materially larger."
"In 2014 our worldwide income tax rate was 26.1%," Mr Cook added.
Analysis by Simon Jack, BBC business editor:
It was a skillful and very nuanced performance by Mr Cook on RTE, but one which obscured a few key truths. He claimed that Apple paid tax at a rate of 26% around the world, but that isn't the whole story.
Apple works out its tax rate as if it had paid taxes due in the US at a rate of 35%. But the actual payment of those taxes is deferred; till when, nobody knows. Maybe until US taxes come down, or some special tax amnesty is agreed to repatriate hundreds of billions that Apple and others keep offshore in the tax equivalent of outer space.
In fact, the scramble to avoid paying tax at thirty-five percent is the reason the whole structure exists in the first place.
On Tuesday, the European Commission ruled that Apple's Irish tax benefits were illegal.
After a three-year investigation, the Commission said Ireland had enabled Apple to pay substantially less than other businesses, in effect paying a corporate tax rate of no more than one percent.
Apple said that the decision would be harmful for jobs. "The European Commission has launched an effort to rewrite Apple's history in Europe, ignore Ireland's tax laws, and upend the international tax system in the process," the company said.
The Irish cabinet met on Wednesday to discuss the tax ruling, but failed to agree on a position, and will meet again on Friday to decide whether to appeal the Commission's decision.
Rico says there's a whole
bunch of lawyers getting paid to fix this...
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