European Ruling Highlights Apple's Corrupted Business Model
By William Lazonick
Aug 31, 2016
There is much for U.S. authorities to learn from the European
example of forcing corporations to pay their fair share of taxes,
but more far-reaching oversight of executives’ allocation of
resources is also required
The European Commission’s decision to serve Apple with a 13 billion
euro tax bill represents a step forward in compelling multinational
companies to pay the taxes that they owe in the countries in which
they do business. The Commission has determined that tax deals
between Apple and the Republic of Ireland as far back as 1991
violated the tax laws of the European Union, of which Ireland is a
member state. Both Ireland, which stands out within the EU for its
“multinational friendly” tax regime, and Apple, which makes a
business of avoiding taxes at home and abroad, claim that their tax
agreements were legal, and hence that the EC’s attempt to claw back
taxes is without merit. Apple will appeal the EC’s decision, and the
courts will decide.
The U.S. government should be applauding the EC’s attempt to bring a
measure of rationality to international corporate tax law. It was in
May 2013 that the U.S. Senate Permanent Subcommittee on
Investigations called Apple CEO Tim Cook on the carpet to answer for
the company’s use of its global operations to game the U.S. tax
system.
[…]
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