Daily Dispatch

EU tackles tax affairs of tech giants

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THEY have revolution­ised the way we live, but are US tech giants the new robber barons of the 21st century, banking billions in profit while short-changing the public by paying only a pittance in tax?

With public coffers still strained years after the worst of the debt crisis, EU leaders have agreed to tackle the question, spurred on by French President Emmanuel Macron who has slammed the likes of Google, Facebook and Apple as the “freeloader­s of the modern world”.

As recently as March, five of the world’s top 10 valued companies were Silicon Valley behemoths: Apple, Google’s Alphabet, Microsoft, Amazon and Facebook. (Germany’s SAP was Europe’s biggest and 56th on the global list). But tax rules today are designed for yesterday’s economy when US multinatio­nals – such as General Motors, IBM or McDonald’s – entered countries loudly, with new factories, jobs and more taxes for the taking.

These firms had what tax specialist­s call “permanent establishm­ent”, when companies showed a clear physical presence measured and taxed through tangible, real world assets. But today in most EU nations, the US tech titans exist almost exclusivel­y in the virtual world, their services piped through Apps to smart phones and tablets from designers and data servers oceans away.

Ghost-like, Silicon Valley has turned Europe’s economies upside down, but often with just a skeleton staff and some office space in markets with millions of users or customers.

According to EU law, to operate across Europe, multinatio­nals have almost total liberty to choose a home country of their choosing. Not surprising­ly, they choose small, low tax nations such as Ireland, the Netherland­s or Luxembourg.

An analysis by Paul Tang, a specialist on tax issues at the European Parliament, France lostà741-million (R12-billion) in tax revenue and Germany million (R14.6-billion) between 2013 and 2015 due to so-called “tax planning” by Google and Facebook. — AFP

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