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After messing with Apple, the EU looks to fuck Amazon's shit up over tax fraud

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Funky Papa

FUNK-Y-PPA-4
For those screaming about the big bad EU going only after American companies, Fiat is also about to get proper fucked.

Paywalled

Brussels is confronting Luxembourg over an unorthodox Amazon tax deal, alleging it allowed the online retail giant to reap potentially illegal state subsidies for its European operations for almost a decade.

The European Commission is poised to launch a formal in-depth probe into its serious concerns over improper state aid, dragging Amazon into a multi-pronged clampdown on sweetheart tax deals that has already ensnared Apple in Ireland and Starbucks in the Netherlands.

...

Investigators believe Luxembourg gave Amazon favourable terms in a 2003 tax ruling, which caps its tax exposure to the Grand Duchy and helps limit its overall bill to less than 1 per cent of the retailer’s European income, according to people briefed on the case.

The expected move by Joaquín Almunia, the outgoing EU competition commissioner, raises further uncomfortable questions for Amazon, a feted ecommerce pioneer, about the extent to which its success has depended on contentious tax policies. Its approach has already come under fire from politicians in the US, UK and France.

...

The Commission’s central allegation is that Luxembourg allowed Amazon to misallocate profit within its corporate structure, in a manner that fell short of standards expected of an arms-length transaction between corporate subsidiaries.

This appears to have artificially reduced Amazon’s tax bill on a selective basis, according to people familiar with the initial investigation, a significant state subsidy that Brussels can order Luxembourg to recoup if it is proven to be illegal.

n its 2013 accounts, Amazon showed sales of €13.6bn running through its Luxembourg operating company and profits of €28.8m. It owed €2.1bn to Amazon SCS.

A spokesperson for Luxembourg's ministry of finance declined to comment.

So far, no transfer pricing report has been shown to the commission with Amazon’s evidence to justify margins agreed in 2003. Submitting such a report is routine in tax negotiations. While most so-called transfer pricing agreements in Europe last for three to five years, the 2003 Amazon ruling has not yet been revised.

During the second stage of the probe, EU investigators are expected to ask Luxembourg and Amazon to explain why its main operating company, holding inventory and bearing business risk, would accept a cap on its profits if it were in a truly arms-length relationship with Amazon SCS.

Lawyers involved in the tax investigations say the commission is wrong to apply the standard retrospectively. Some Irish politicians claim the state aid probes are a backdoor way for Brussels to meddle in sovereign tax policy.

While Brussels’ main tax investigations were developed and launched by Mr Almunia, the cases will as soon as next month be inherited by his successor Margrethe Vestager, the former Danish economy minister.

During her confirmation hearing last week, Ms Vestager made the tax investigations a “high priority” and hit out at the injustice of big multinational companies being able to secure favourable terms unavailable to their smaller rivals.

Luxembourg initially refused to fully comply with the commission’s demand for information on its tax rulings, prompting Brussels to issue an injunction. While Luxembourg is still fighting the case in court, there has been greater co-operation since the appointment of Mr Juncker.

It's sad to see Almunia go. I never liked him as a politician in Spain, but his latest work in the EU has been monumental despite some fumblings, specially when it comes to consumer protection and putting some corporations on notice. He's been in full beast mode over this past years, much to the chagrain of some high ranking officials from Europe and abroad. I hope Vestager is even fiercer than him.
 

KPJZKC

Member
"Some Irish politicians" can go fuck themselves. Getting tired of the indignant reactions from these corrupt scumbags.
 

Zornica

Banned
Is that a good or bad sign?

Jean-Claude Juncker (Luxembourgish pronunciation: [ʒ̊ɑ̃ːkloːd ˈjʊŋ.kɐ]; born 9 December 1954) is a politician who is President-elect of the European Commission. He was previously the Prime Minister of Luxembourg from 1995 to 2013

any questions?
 

Zornica

Banned
The question I'm asking myself is whether they are cooperative right now because they believe that Juncker will put these initiatives to rest once he's in the EC.

that's a possibility and seems pretty likely. maybe it's also because they already had some experiences working with him in the past when he implemented those tax breaks in the first place.
We'll see...
 
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