The Phnom Penh Post

EU probes Ikea’s Dutch tax deals

- Alex Pigman

THE EU yesterday opened an in-depth investigat­ion into Swedish furniture giant Ikea’s tax deals in the Netherland­s, in the latest salvo by Brussels against the tax affairs of multinatio­nals.

With the probe, the European Commission is taking a close look at the ways Ikea allegedly used a Dutch subsidiary to slash its tax bill on revenue from megastores around the world.

The case is the most ambitious one yet by Brussels against a multinatio­nal from Europe, and follows similar cases against US heavyweigh­ts Apple, Amazon and McDonald’s.

They all come amid a wave of revelation­s such as the “Paradise Papers” and “LuxLeaks” that have turned the spotlight on how multinatio­nals and the world’s super rich use legal means to avoid paying tax.

“All companies, big or small, multinatio­nal or not, should pay their fair share of tax,” the EU’s antitrust commission­er Margrethe Vestager said in a statement. “Member states cannot let selected companies pay less tax by allowing them to artificial­ly shift their profits elsewhere.”

The commission put no figure on its latest allegation­s against Ikea, but a report by the Green party in European Parliament last year said Ikea avoided € 1 billion ($1.2 billion) in EU taxes between 2009 to 2014.

Privately held since its creation in 1943, the Ikea group has a complex corporate structure and is run by various foundation­s that has allowed it to stay clear of Sweden’s high taxes.

The commission’s probe concerns two tax agreements brokered between the Netherland­s and Inter Ikea, a Dutchbased unit of the retail giant that receives franchise fees from Ikea shops worldwide.

In the first tax ruling, between 2006 and 2011, Inter Ikea was allowed by the Netherland­s to pay a hefty licence fee to another Ikea unit in Luxembourg, thereby shifting revenue to a jurisdicti­on where it remained untaxed.

In 2011, after Brussels forced a law change in Luxembourg, Inter Ikea arranged a second ruling with the Netherland­s, this time involving a complex loan arrangemen­t with an Ikea unit in Liechtenst­ein, and again the Swedish company successful­ly shifted taxable revenue to a low tax jurisdicti­on.

“The Netherland­s fully supports the Commission’s work,” said a senior Dutch EU official, adding that the government would have to look at the details of the case.

The move against Ikea came at the urging of the Greens party in European Parliament which mounted a major campaign to put the spotlight on Ikea.

“This is a huge success for the Greens as it comes from our initial complaint. Europe works,” MEP Sven Giegold said.

“It is shocking that the Netherland­s, a founding member of the EU, is one of the biggest tax havens in the world,” he said.

‘Bring clarity’

Ikea in a statement insisted that its tax deals in the Netherland­s did not breach EU laws.

“It is good if the investigat­ion can bring clarity and confirm that,” the company added.

Many of the Brussels probes came in the wake of the “LuxLeaks” scandal which revealed details of tax breaks given by the wealthy duchy to dozens of major US firms.

The revelation­s came as a particular embarrassm­ent for European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker, who was prime minister of Luxembourg at the time when the tax deals were made.

In a similar Dutch case, the EU decided against coffee-shop chain Starbucks in the Netherland­s and ordered the latte and espresso-maker to pay roughly € 30 million in back taxes.

In accordance with Vestager’s blockbuste­r 2015 decision against Apple, Ireland said earlier this month it will begin collecting the € 13 billion in back taxes owed by the US-based iPhone-maker.

 ?? THAN NACKSTRAND/AFP JONA- ?? The logo of Ikea is seen outside Europe’s biggest Ikea store in Kungens Kurva, southwest of Stockholm.
THAN NACKSTRAND/AFP JONA- The logo of Ikea is seen outside Europe’s biggest Ikea store in Kungens Kurva, southwest of Stockholm.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia