Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Amazon avoids corporate tax at Europe HQ

- By Jenny Gross and Adam Satariano

The tech giant had paid no tax despite a record-breaking year in Europe in 2020, taking in $53 billion.

Amazon had a record-breaking year in Europe in 2020, as the online giant took in revenue of 44 billion euros, or nearly $53 billion, while people were shopping from home during the pandemic.

But the company ended up paying no corporate tax to Luxembourg, where the company has its European headquarte­rs.

The company’s European retail division reported a loss of 1.2 billion euros, or $1.4 billion, to Luxembourg authoritie­s, according to a recent financial filing, making it exempt from corporate taxes. The loss, which was due in part to discounts, advertisin­g and the cost of hiring new employees, also meant the company received 56 million euros, or $67 million, in tax credits that it could use to offset future tax bills when it makes a profit, according to the filing, released in March.

Amazon was in compliance with Luxembourg’s regulation­s, and it pays taxes to other European countries on profits it makes on its retail operations and other parts of the business, like its fulfillmen­t centers and its cloud computing services.

But the filing is likely to provide fresh ammunition for European policymake­rs who have long tried to force American tech giants to pay more taxes. And the Biden administra­tion is pushing for changes in global tax policy as part of an effort to raise taxes on large corporatio­ns, which have long used complicate­d maneuvers to avoid or reduce their tax obligation­s, including by shifting profits to lower-tax countries, like Luxembourg, Ireland, Bermuda and the Cayman Islands.

President Joe Biden has

said he is aiming to raise as much as $2.5 trillion over 15 years through measures such as increasing corporate tax rates to 28% from 21% and imposing a minimum tax on global profits.

Already, France has levied a 3% tax on revenue from digital services provided within the country, an effort to wring some revenue from internet companies — a tax that Amazon says it is paying — but European Union-wide policies have been thwarted by opposition from Washington.

In its filing, covering 2020, Amazon avoids paying Luxembourg’s corporate tax, which is a tax on profit. In 2020, Amazon’s overall internatio­nal segment reported operating profit of $717 million. And in the first three months of this year, the entire company’s profit soared to $8.1 billion, an increase of 220% from the same period last year. Amazon’s first-quarter filings, released last week, also showed that it made $108.5 billion in sales, up 44%, as more customers made purchases online

because of the pandemic.

The company’s filing with Luxembourg was reported earlier by The Guardian.

A spokesman for Amazon, Conor Sweeney, said the company paid all taxes required in every country in which it operated.

“Corporate tax is based on profits, not revenues, and our profits have remained low given our heavy investment­s and the fact that retail is a highly competitiv­e, low-margin business,” he said.

Amazon has paid tax in Luxembourg previously, though European regulators said the payments were less than the company’s fair share.

Margaret Hodge, a British lawmaker, said Amazon had deliberate­ly created financial structures to avoid tax.

“It’s obscene that they feel that they can make money around the world and that they don’t have an obligation to contribute to what I call the common pot for the common good,” Hodge said.

 ?? PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS/AP 2019 ?? Amazon, led by Jeff Bezos, did not pay any corporate tax for 2020 in Luxembourg, home of the online giant’s European headquarte­rs.
PABLO MARTINEZ MONSIVAIS/AP 2019 Amazon, led by Jeff Bezos, did not pay any corporate tax for 2020 in Luxembourg, home of the online giant’s European headquarte­rs.

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