More on Bloomberg: <a href="http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-12-10/google-revenues-sheltered-in-no-tax-bermuda-soar-to-10-billion.html">http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-12-10/google-revenues-sheltered-in-no-tax-bermuda-soar-to-10-billion.html</a><br>
<br><div class="gmail_quote">On Thu, Dec 13, 2012 at 4:48 AM, Salanieta T. Tamanikaiwaimaro <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:salanieta.tamanikaiwaimaro@gmail.com" target="_blank">salanieta.tamanikaiwaimaro@gmail.com</a>></span> wrote:<br>
<blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex"><div><br></div><div>Somehow it feels that there is a targeted media campaign out against the likes of Google and other mncs - the timing of the release is almost impeccable with the WCIT. </div>
<div><br></div><div>Source: <a href="http://www.telecomtv.com/comspace_newsDetail.aspx?n=49763&id=e9381817-0593-417a-8639-c4c53e2a2a10" target="_blank">http://www.telecomtv.com/comspace_newsDetail.aspx?n=49763&id=e9381817-0593-417a-8639-c4c53e2a2a10</a></div>
<div><br></div><h1 style="padding:0px;margin:0px 0px 2px;font-size:18pt;line-height:28px;color:rgb(43,39,35);font-family:'Lucida Sans Unicode','Lucida Grande CY','Helvetica CY'"><span style="padding:0px;margin:0px">Google “can make money without doing evil” (as it evades $2bn in taxes)</span></h1>
<div style="padding:0px 0px 10px;margin:0px;font-size:12px;font-family:'Lucida Sans Unicode','Lucida Grande CY','Helvetica CY';word-wrap:break-word">Posted By <a href="http://www.telecomtv.com/go/?ct=9&id=e9381817-0593-417a-8639-c4c53e2a2a10" style="padding:0px;margin:0px;color:rgb(205,153,0)" target="_blank">TelecomTV One</a> , <span style="padding:0px;margin:0px">12 December 2012</span> | <a href="http://www.telecomtv.com/comspace_newsDetail.aspx?n=49763&id=e9381817-0593-417a-8639-c4c53e2a2a10#comments" style="padding:0px;margin:0px;color:rgb(205,153,0)" target="_blank"><span style="padding:0px;margin:0px">1</span> Comments</a> | <span style="padding:0px;margin:0px;font-size:11px;font-family:Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif;white-space:nowrap"><img title="0 people rated this an average of 3/5" src="http://www.telecomtv.com/images/starOn.gif" style="padding:0px;margin:0px;border:0px"> <img title="0 people rated this an average of 3/5" src="http://www.telecomtv.com/images/starOn.gif" style="padding:0px;margin:0px;border:0px"> <img title="0 people rated this an average of 3/5" src="http://www.telecomtv.com/images/starOn.gif" style="padding:0px;margin:0px;border:0px"> <span style="padding:0px;margin:0px">(0)</span></span> <br style="padding:0px;margin:0px">
<span style="padding:0px;margin:0px">Tags:</span> <i style="padding:0px;margin:0px"><a href="http://www.telecomtv.com/results.aspx?tag=122&tagname=Google" style="padding:0px;margin:0px;color:rgb(205,153,0)" target="_blank">Google</a></i> <i style="padding:0px;margin:0px"><a href="http://www.telecomtv.com/results.aspx?tag=6972&tagname=corporate" style="padding:0px;margin:0px;color:rgb(205,153,0)" target="_blank">corporate</a></i> <i style="padding:0px;margin:0px"><a href="http://www.telecomtv.com/results.aspx?tag=434&tagname=tax" style="padding:0px;margin:0px;color:rgb(205,153,0)" target="_blank">tax</a></i> <i style="padding:0px;margin:0px"><a href="http://www.telecomtv.com/results.aspx?tag=365&tagname=Finance" style="padding:0px;margin:0px;color:rgb(205,153,0)" target="_blank">Finance</a></i></div>
<div style="padding:0px;margin:0px;font-size:13.5px;color:rgb(102,102,102);line-height:19px;font-family:'Lucida Sans Unicode','Lucida Grande CY','Helvetica CY'"><p style="padding:0px;margin:0px">
<span style="padding:0px;margin:0px">As the net closes around the multinationals that avoid paying corporation taxes, Google is accused of saving $2bn by routing income through a “Double Irish Dutch Sandwich”, paying tax of just 3.2 per cent on its overseas profits. Guy Daniels reports.</span></p>
</div><div style="padding:10px 0px 0px;margin:0px;font-size:12.5px;color:rgb(102,102,102);line-height:18px;font-family:'Lucida Sans Unicode','Lucida Grande CY','Helvetica CY'"><p style="padding:0px;margin:0px">
</p><p style="padding:0px;margin:0px">Three questions. One; where do you stand on the subject of tax avoidance? We at TelecomTV believe that individuals and corporations have a duty to pay their fair share of tax. By fair, we mean whatever respective governments rule to be the legal requirement (after all, in most countries, we voted the politicians in to office). By all means try and mitigate the amount of tax you have to pay, using whatever accepted mechanisms are available. But avoidance? That just means somebody else (with far less access to expensive and clever advisors) has to contribute to your share as well.</p>
<p style="padding:0px;margin:0px"> </p><p style="padding:0px;margin:0px">Second question: how do you define evil? The Oxford English Dictionary defines evil as “profoundly immoral and wicked” or “something which is harmful or undesirable”. In my book, that means tax avoidance is evil, simple as that.</p>
<p style="padding:0px;margin:0px"> </p><p style="padding:0px;margin:0px">Third and final question: Is Google evil? If you believe that avoiding tax is wrong (especially through aggressive and mind-boggling complicated avoidance schemes) and if you believe that depriving society of tax revenues is wrong (and so reducing the level of available State support for the most needy) and could be described as an evil act, then surely you must conclude that Google is acting in an evil manner.</p>
<p style="padding:0px;margin:0px"> </p><p style="padding:0px;margin:0px">An investigative report by <a href="http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-12-10/google-revenues-sheltered-in-no-tax-bermuda-soar-to-10-billion.html" style="padding:0px;margin:0px;color:rgb(57,48,44)" target="_blank">Bloomberg</a> has discovered that Google avoided about $2 billion in worldwide income taxes in 2011 by shifting $9.8 billion in revenues into a Bermuda shell company – almost double its total from three years ago. The information was disclosed in a November filing by a Google subsidiary in the Netherlands, which was discovered by reporters from Bloomberg.</p>
<p style="padding:0px;margin:0px"> </p><p style="padding:0px;margin:0px">It appears that Google legally routed profits from overseas subsidiaries into Bermuda, which doesn’t have a corporate income tax, thereby enabling it to cut its overall tax rate almost in half. Bloomberg says the amount moved to Bermuda is equivalent to about 80 per cent of Google’s total pretax profit in 2011.</p>
<p style="padding:0px;margin:0px"> </p><p style="padding:0px;margin:0px">Tax evasion and avoidance costs the European Union a staggering €1 trillion a year. That’s worth dwelling on for a moment longer…. €1 trillion. No wonder politicians are now acting to try and prevent this financial loss and branding such acts as scandalous and immoral.</p>
<p style="padding:0px;margin:0px"> </p><p style="padding:0px;margin:0px">Bloomberg has a good quote from a UK-based tax accountant, which pretty much sums up the feeling in Europe at the moment. According to Richard Murphy of Tax Research:</p>
<p style="padding:0px;margin:0px"> </p><p style="padding:0px;margin:0px 0px 0px 40px"><cite style="padding:0px;margin:0px">“The tax strategy of Google and other multinationals is a deep embarrassment to governments around Europe. The political awareness now being created in the UK, and to a lesser degree elsewhere in Europe, is: It’s us or them. People understand that if Google doesn’t pay, somebody else has to pay or services get cut.”</cite></p>
<p style="padding:0px;margin:0px"> </p><p style="padding:0px;margin:0px">Just look what happened to Starbucks. When the public discovered the US coffee giant paid zero taxes in the UK (yes, absolutely nothing at all), it started to boycott the chain.</p>
<div style="padding:0px;margin:15px 0px 10px;text-align:center"><div style="padding:0px;margin:0px;color:rgb(128,128,128);font-size:10px">Advertisement</div></div>As a result, Starbucks was forced to “volunteer” to pay taxes…<p style="padding:0px;margin:0px">
</p><p style="padding:0px;margin:0px"> </p><p style="padding:0px;margin:0px">The UK is Google’s second-biggest market, responsible for about 11 per cent of its sales. Of the $4 billion it turned over last year, it paid UK corporation tax of less than $10 million. Bloomberg says Google avoids tax by using an Irish subsidiary to collects revenues from ads sold in the UK, which then pays royalties to another Irish subsidiary whose legal residence is in Bermuda. Payments are then sent to yet another subsidiary in the Netherlands (with no employees, note) before finally reaching the tax haven of Bermuda.</p>
<p style="padding:0px;margin:0px"> </p><p style="padding:0px;margin:0px">Sounds pretty ‘evil’ to me. And if so, then that’s against the internet company’s guiding principles. Stated clearly on the “Ten Things We Know to be True” page on <a href="http://www.google.com/about/company/philosophy/" style="padding:0px;margin:0px;color:rgb(57,48,44)" target="_blank">Google</a>’s website is the following:</p>
<p style="padding:0px;margin:0px"> </p><p style="padding:0px;margin:0px 0px 0px 40px"><cite style="padding:0px;margin:0px">“You can make money without doing evil.”</cite></p><p style="padding:0px;margin:0px"> </p><p style="padding:0px;margin:0px">
I’m sorry, Google, but I don’t see how avoiding tax is anything but evil. Of course you – and all companies – have a duty to shareholders to maximise profits. But there are rules. Some of these are merely ethical, whilst some are legal. There is no indication or suggestion that Google has acted illegally, but there is every suggestion that it has acted unethically.</p>
<p style="padding:0px;margin:0px"> </p><p style="padding:0px;margin:0px">And who said you can’t have ‘ethical companies’? Of course you can. I don’t buy the ‘extreme capitalist’ viewpoint that corporations will only act in self-interest and never “do the right thing” or pay their fair share. If their customers start to boycott their services, then they’ll change. It happened with the sudden emergence of all the so-called ‘corporate responsibility’ positions that all featured heavily in annual reports. I don’t see why it can’t happen with fair tax positions.</p>
<p style="padding:0px;margin:0px"> </p><p style="padding:0px;margin:0px">Other ICT companies reported in the media to be using this complicated tax evasion (sorry lawyers, of course I mean ‘mitigation’…) structure include Apple, Facebook, Microsoft and Oracle. Unfortunately, Google – and all the others, who no doubt will soon be named and shamed – will continue their sharp practices until they are forced to make a change. If governments can’t do that through the legal process, then it’s up to customers to vote with their feet and walk away from Google services. As Richard Murphy said, consumers are beginning to get the message that it’s “us or them”, and we’re already being squeezed by the many austerity measures that are in effect to drag us out of recession.</p>
<p style="padding:0px;margin:0px"> </p><p style="padding:0px;margin:0px">Come on Google, time to step up to the plate and show some leadership. Pay your fair share. And then the rest of the ICT industry can do likewise. Or else remove that fatuous and out-dated “don’t do evil” slogan from your website once and for all.</p>
<p style="padding:0px;margin:0px"> </p><p style="padding:0px;margin:0px"><u style="padding:0px;margin:0px">Further reading: </u>The <a href="http://www.pearse-trust.ie/blog/bid/86105/US-Companies-Their-Use-Of-The-Double-Irish-Dutch-Sandwich" style="padding:0px;margin:0px;color:rgb(57,48,44)" target="_blank">Pearse Trust</a> blog has a detailed explanation of the so-called “Double Irish Dutch Sandwich” tax scheme. Please don’t try and implement it.</p>
<p style="padding:0px;margin:0px"> </p></div>
</blockquote></div><br><br clear="all"><div><br></div>-- <br><div>Salanieta Tamanikaiwaimaro aka Sala</div><div>P.O. Box 17862</div><div>Suva</div><div>Fiji</div><div><br></div><div>Twitter: @SalanietaT</div><div>Skype:Salanieta.Tamanikaiwaimaro</div>
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