The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Ireland recovers 14 bln euros in Apple ‘back taxes’

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DUBLIN: Apple has completed payment of 14.3 billion euros (US$16.7 billion) in back taxes to the Irish government, Dublin said, following a European Commission ruling that the tech giant had benefitted from illegal tax breaks in the country.

The money has been paid into an escrow account, a type of third-party account used in transactio­ns.

The payments were issued over the second and third quarters of 2018, creating “one of the largest funds of its kind to be establishe­d,” finance minister Paschal Donohoe said in a statement.

But Dublin continues to deny that Apple – which has establishe­d its European headquarte­rs in Ireland – benefitted from preferenti­al treatment from revenue services, as the Commission ruled in 2016.

In his statement Donohoe referred to the recovered funds as “alleged state aid” and said the ruling continues to be formally challenged.

But he said Ireland had made the recovery as a result of its obligation­s as an EU member state.

“The government fundamenta­lly disagrees with the Commission’s analysis in the Apple State Aid decision and is seeking an annulment of that decision in the European Courts,” he said.

Donohoe said the funds would remain in escrow pending the outcome of the appeal presently before the European courts.

The European Commission said Apple paid an effective corporate tax rate of just 0.005 per cent on its European profits in 2014 – an equivalent to 50 euros for every million.

But the Irish government said Apple paid the full amount owed to the state from 2004 to 2014 and denies it gave it “selective treatment”. — AFP

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