The Phnom Penh Post

Google okays 1B settlement with France

- Juliette Montesse and Valentin Bontemps

US INTERNET giant Google has agreed a settlement totalling € 965 million ($1.07 billion) to end a tax dispute in France underanagr­eementanno­unced in court on Thursday.

The company will pay a € 500 million fine for tax evasion, as well as a further € 465 million to settle claims with French tax authoritie­s.

In a statement, Google confirmed the settlement and hailed the fact it had put an end to fiscal difference­s that it had had with France for numerous years.

The settlement follows similar o u t - o f - c o u r t a g re e ments reached by Google in Italy and Britain in recent years, though the French agreement is much larger than the previous ones.

Google said it now wanted to see a coordinate­d reform for a clear internatio­nal taxation framework.

French Justice Minister Nicole Belloubet and Budget Minister Gerald Darmanin welcomed the “definitive settling” of all the contentiou­s issues, adding in a statement that it was the result of two years of intense work by the French authoritie­s.

“This outcome is good news for the public finances and fiscal fairness in France,” their statement said.

Belloubet said the settlement showed that the French authoritie­s have the tools to ensure an equitable tax system.

“It is a historic settlement both for our public finances and because it marks the end of an era,” Darmanin said. “By normalisin­g Google’s situation in France, [the settlement] responds to our citizens’ demands for fiscal fairness,” he said.

G7 deal?

The settlement comes as France and its European allies seek to find common ground with the US in a long-running dispute over the taxation of digital giants.

Google, like several other big US tech companies, has its European headquarte­rs in Ireland, where the government has set the corporate tax rate at just 12.5 per cent in a bid to attract big companies.

But leading EU states like France argue that this is allowing tech giants to avoid paying sufficient taxes on the huge profits and sales they accrue in big countries outside where the tech giants are headquarte­red.

The French parliament in July passed a law taxing digital giants on their French operations, drawing an angr y response from US President Donald Trump and threats of retaliatio­n.

The British government is now planning a similar move, at a time when it also hopes to build on its relationsh­ip with Washington as it exits the EU.

B u t Fr e n c h P r e s i d e n t Emmanuel Macron said alongside Trump at the Group of Seven (G7) summit last month that leaders had reached an agreement on the taxation of tech giants, though the precise details remain to be worked out.

Macron has said it will scrap its digital tax once a new internatio­nal levy being discussed among the 134 Organisati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t (OECD) countries is in place, which Paris hopes will happen next year.

Pascal Saint-Amans, who is leading the negotiatio­ns as head of tax policy at the OECD, said after the G7 that progress is being made but several key issues still need to be hammered out.

The Google investigat­ion in France was first opened by anti-fraud prosecutor­s in 2015 and was followed by searches at its Paris headquarte­rs in 2016, an operation codenamed “Tulip” that mobilised a hundred police and experts.

In 2016, Google paid £130 million ($160,000) in a settlement with the British authoritie­s and in 2017 agreed to pay € 306 million to settle a tax dispute in Italy.

 ?? ALAIN JOCARD/AFP ?? In a statement, Google confirmed the €965 million ($1.07 billion) settlement and hailed the fact it had put an end to fiscal difference­s that it had had with France for numerous years.
ALAIN JOCARD/AFP In a statement, Google confirmed the €965 million ($1.07 billion) settlement and hailed the fact it had put an end to fiscal difference­s that it had had with France for numerous years.

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