Arab Times

Cook bashes talk Apple is dodging taxes

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SAN FRANCISCO, Dec 19, (AFP): Apple chief Tim Cook emphatical­ly rejected accusation­s that the world’s richest company is sidesteppi­ng US taxes by keeping bundles of cash overseas, suggesting that the claim was politicall­y motivated.

World leaders last month approved a crackdown on tax avoidance by multinatio­nals such as Apple, Google and McDonald’s, major firms whose rock-bottom tax bills have provoked widespread outrage in the United States and beyond.

Cook argued that Apple pays the biggest tax tab in the United States and that it keeps more money overseas than other company because two-thirds of its business is there.

Cook’s staunch defense of the California-based technology colossus came during an interview with Charlie Rose in a 60 Minutes news program interview to be aired on Sunday on CBS.

“That’s total political crap, there is no truth behind it,” Cook responded when pressed about the highly contentiou­s tax issue in a short preview of the interview. “We pay every tax dollar we owe.” Cook laid the blame on an outdated US tax code, calling for it to be revamped for modern times.

“This is a tax code that was made for the Industrial Age, not the Digital Age,” Cook said.

“It’s backwards. America.”

The empassione­d response from Cook followed Rose contending that many members of Congress believe Apple is perpetuati­ng a scheme to pay little or no taxes on $74 billion in overseas revenue.

“I’d love to bring it home,” Cook said of cash kept outside the US.

“But don’t because it would cost me 40 percent to bring it home and I don’t think this is a reasonable thing to do.”

It comes

a

It’s awful for

year

after

the “LuxLeaks” revelation­s that some of the world’s biggest companies — also including Pepsi and Ikea — had lowered their tax rates to as little as one percent in secret pacts with tax authoritie­s in Luxembourg.

US President Barack Obama, Chinese leader Xi Jinping and Britain’s Prime Minister David Cameron joined fellow leaders in endorsing a clampdown drawn up by the wealthy nations’ Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t.

The OECD calculates that national government­s lose $100-240 billion, or 4-10 percent of global tax revenues, every year because of the taxminimiz­ing schemes of multinatio­nals.

Its 15-point plan, adopted after years of negotiatio­ns, seeks to oblige multinatio­nals to pay tax in the country where their main business activity is based.

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