ANNO XVIII Aprile 2024.  Direttore Umberto Calabrese

Martedì, 30 Agosto 2016 15:13

Apple ordered to pay 13bn euro tax bill to Ireland, both to appeal

Written by 
Rate this item
(0 votes)

The European Commission has taken a big bite out of Apple.

The tech giant has been ordered to pay up to 13 billion euros in back taxes to the Irish government in Dublin.

The EU accused Apple, which employs thousands of people in Ireland, of benefiting unfairly from special arrangements with the country that allowed it to keep its tax bills there to a minimum. The EC ruled the scheme, which saw profits routed through Ireland, was illegal state aid.

As a result, the bloc slapped Europe’s biggest ever tax penalty on Apple.

The tech giant paid a tax rate on European profits of between 0.005 and 1 percent, the Commission said.

Bizarre

Ireland’s finance minister Michael Noonan said: “As far as I am concerned there is no economic basis for this decision. It’s bizarre and it’s an exercise in politics by the Competition Commission.”

He told state broadcaster RTE: “They don’t have responsibility for taxes and they are opening a back door through state aid to influence tax policy in European countries when the European treaties say tax policy is a matter for sovereign governments,” he added.

Ireland’s low corporate tax rate has been a cornerstone of economic policy for 20 years, drawing investors from major multinational companies whose staff account for almost one in 10 workers in the country.

Both Apple and Ireland deny any wrongdoing and have said they will appeal the decision.

In a letter to customers Apple’s chief executive Tim Cook said: “The European Commission has launched an effort to rewrite Apple’s history in Europe, ignore Ireland’s tax laws and upend the international tax system in the process. The opinion issued on August 30th alleges that Ireland gave Apple a special deal on our taxes.”

“This claim has no basis in fact or in law. We never asked for, nor did we receive, any special deals. We now find ourselves in the unusual position of being ordered to retroactively pay additional taxes to a government that says we don’t owe them any more than we’ve already paid.”

The bill is far more than the 30 million euros each the European Commission previously ordered Dutch authorities to recover from US coffee chain Starbucks and Luxembourg from Fiat-Chrysler for their tax deals.

Both companies and countries have appealed those decisions.

US disappointed

The US government has also weighed into the row, previously accusing the European Commission of deliberately targeting American firms – something Brussels denies.

On Tuesday a US Treasury official would not comment specifically on the Apple case, but said Washington is disappointed that the EU Commission has acted unilaterally.

“The Commission’s actions could threaten to undermine foreign investment, the business climate in Europe, and the important spirit of economic partnership between the US and the EU,” the spokesperson said.

A huge tax bill is likely to make all the wrong headlines ahead of early September’s expected unveiling of Apple’s latest iPhone. (Euronews)

Read 707 times

Utenti Online

Abbiamo 884 visitatori e nessun utente online