Watched the news reports last night as well as the performance of the Directors of Google, Amazon & Starbucks in front of the select committee.
Despite the public outcry and claims of how morally wrong it all is I can't help but think:
Corporation tax is an unfair tax anyway as it is a punishment for success - why did we (UK PLC) not think about setting up an attractive Corporation tax regime to attract these Company HQ's? I did also think it strange that Google were attracted tio Ireland because of the low corporation tax and yet Ireland has been a recipient of a Euro bailout - but I guess that is another story.
The point is that these Companies are global entities and so presumably they are mitigating their tax liabilities across many different State borders and not just the UK. I would take a positive spin on this and look at ways that we can make UK PLC the preferred home for these worldwide mega companies by being more tax friendly. We need to be corporate friendly country and forget about penalising companies for success - or at least offer CT offsets if profits are banked in this country.
I cannot agree more TH.
The piss poor journalistic take on this suggests to the wider public a very narrow minded picture.
These corporations bring thousands of quality jobs to the UK and to suggest they pay no tax is completely wrong as it implies that workers' tax and NI contributions are also somehow 'spirited away' and not handed over to the Exchequer.
This is totally false.
But, like everything else UK, people are too busy looking over their shoulders at what others are doing rather than 'go getting' for themselves and reducing the need to invite overseas corporations to build jobs here.
I have to disagree star.
Suppose Starbucks decides it can't be bothered anymore or paying full taxes as current Corporate Tax law dictates makes their business not profitable enough to keep it afloat.
They close down shop and get out of the country. What do we do with the thousands of people that are actually employed by them ?
Same for Amazon same for other companies. I do not understand why is everybody looking at what they pay the tax man and ignoring how many jobs they have created and how many people have salaries because of them.
On the BBC several months ago i heard an interview that stuck in my mind. They asked a guy making something like 500k+ an year how did the 50% tax on high earning people and other taxes on high earning people affected him.
The guy answered very simply: I fired the gardener and the cook apart from that no difference.
I know it is a crude example and it is not a global view of the whole tax system. But when things get to the little guy this is exactly what happens. When you tax the crap out of an entity that entity will cut its losses and usually the first losses that are cut are jobs since that is the easiest and fastest way you can return to what you consider equilibrium.
Liza i concur!
But what they might do is take a good look at their business out of the new necessity and streamline their operations and cut back jobs to make up for the difference.
there is a small growing movement against this type of business
people power is only a matter of time
tax avoidance schemes
off shore companies
deli call centres
all things the general public are starting to vote with their feet over
You are taking the example too much to heart. Starbucks was just one of the companies.
Also i beg to differ, you cannot convince me that the moment Starbucks walks out of the streets miraculously there will be x hundred small time coffee shops ready to open doors.
With the required funds available to rent a place, build something and start selling, especially in central locations.
And again this was just one example. There are other companies that their business is not so easily replicated by local small time businesses not to say impossible.
I have to side with Too Hot as what is being said makes much sense to me. There just needs to be some reinventing happening and make the UK attractive via incentives and not shoot to tax until dead.
I think our tax regime, is over complicated and inherently inefficient.
Tinkering achieves little.
A thorough overhaul is necessary.
Mebbe this current spindoctoring is with a view to garnering electoral support for such a move.
In any event, as usual, the members of a select committee makes themselves look like total dicks by displaying complete ignorance of the issues they are paid to understand.
I think we are all missing the point here.
Our tax legislation allows HMRC to look at a group of transactions and say – the figures here are designed to send profits outside the uk and so substitute the figures for real ones. So Starbucks may pay to Switzerland for every cup of coffee but HMRC say that’s fine but for tax purposes its 30p per cup.
The real question is why aren’t HMRC doing this – is it because it’s easier to hassle the small guy as he won’t be represented by a major legal team ?? – or perhaps agreement is reached somewhere else in the system which we know nothing about?? – ohh I feel a conspiracy theory coming on …
Quite. Why weren't the executives questioned more robust in their answers instead of behaving like naughty schoolboys?
I think I agree with you.
so how do we stop companies just registering for business tax breaks
and actually getting them to trade here also
then you will have the competition from other nations for this business. so what sort if incentives to do you give to keep them here
would it not be best to invest in manufacturing and secure our future as opposed to bowing to the corporates and hope no one steals this business