The Guardian (USA)

Google's UK staff earned average of £234,000 in 2019

- Mark Sweney

Google’s UK staff earned an average of £234,000 each last year as the tech firm paid more than £1bn in wages and a share scheme – but only £44m in UK corporatio­n tax.

Google, which increased UK staff numbers by almost 800 to 4,439 last year, footed its first £1bn-plus wage and salary bill for the year to the end of June. The £1.04bn total was a 25% increase on the £829m paid to staff in 2018, according to the company’s latest financial filings in Britain.

The accounts show UK staff received a £441m bonanza in share-based bonuses, thanks to Google’s surging stock price and financial performanc­e in 2019. This is 29% more than the £342m pot the previous year.

The pay bill was spent on 1,723 marketing staff, 2,171 research and developmen­t employees and 545 classified as management and administra­tion. The average payout of £234,000 is £8,000 higher than the £226,000 average pay package in 2018.

The accounts show Google paid £44m in UK corporatio­n tax, down from £66m a year earlier, as pre-tax profits fell slightly from £246m to £225m.

Cost increases in the year included the hiring of almost 400 research and developmen­t staff, as spending in this area rose from £387m to £462m year on year.

“As an internatio­nal business, we pay the vast majority – more than 80% – of our corporate income tax in the US, which is our home country,” a spokeswoma­n for Google UK said. “We also pay all of the tax that is due in the UK. We continue to strongly support the OECD’s [Organisati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t] work to develop a new internatio­nal framework for how multinatio­nal companies are taxed.”

The government is pressing ahead with plans to impose a 2% digital services tax on the UK revenues of online companies including Google, Facebook and Amazon.

Google UK reported £1.6bn in revenues last year, up from £1.2bn, but this does not reflect how much it makes in total advertisin­g revenues in the UK as they are reported in other jurisdicti­ons.

The research company eMarketer estimates that in reality Google made about £5.7bn in ad revenue in the UK last year, accounting for 39% of the total digital ad market, and will make more than £6bn this year.

In October, it emerged that Facebook’s UK operations paid £28m in corporatio­n tax last year despite achieving a record £1.6bn in British sales. EMarketer estimates that in reality Facebook, the second-biggest player in the UK digital ad market behind Google, made £3.6bn in online ad revenues, and will make £4.2bn this year.

Google UK operates as the marketing and sales division of its European operation, which is headquarte­red in Dublin, where taxes are lower.

The UK operation makes most of its reported revenue through an annual “research and developmen­t” fee from its US headquarte­rs and a “marketing services” payment from Dublin.

Google, which has a market value of more than $800bn, made $111bn in total global revenues and profits rose to $34bn last year. In the Europe, Middle East and Africa region, revenues rose 13% from $44.7bn to $50.6bn.

 ??  ?? Google UK reported £1.6bn in revenues last year, up from £1.2bn. Photograph: Sopa/LightRocke­t via Getty
Google UK reported £1.6bn in revenues last year, up from £1.2bn. Photograph: Sopa/LightRocke­t via Getty

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States