ROBINSON wrote:Too right, it's annoying that companies like Google get out of paying their fair whack of tax. I believe they should, indeed, pay what they technically owe.
BUT, if such incentives were not offered, Google (and others) simply wouldn't set up business there. They'd find somewhere else with a more 'attractive' tax system. You might think that's OK, but with companies like Google come lots and lots of jobs, and with those jobs come employees, all of whom pay tax on both their earnings and on what they spend their wages on. Without companies like Google investing in the local economy, those jobs simply wouldn't exist.
Rubbish. The people Google employ here in the UK are employed to make a profit for Google in the UK. If the UK government somehow managed to take 24% of that profit (current main rate of corporation tax) the idea Google would cease doing business here and chuck away the other 76% of that UK derived profit is a ludicrous idea. They would continue to employ those people just the same and would continue to do business here.
Quote:And then you've got the money Google spend on being able to do business and provide those jobs. Their offices have to be paid for, as do their internet connections, their phones, their office equipment, any office materials, and whatever else Google need to use in order to do business.
Profit comes after overheads have been deducted doesn't it!
Quote:I'm not defending this, but Governments have to do their sums too, and if the lack of corporation tax is more than made up for with the tax they collect on related activities, then the argument that the country is being robbed stacks up a bit less than if you simplify it all as "Google don't pay tax"
Given the tax they collect on related activities would be no different then you would be wrong there.
Quote:I'm not saying it's right, all this, but if it's a case of "jobs v no jobs", or more accurately "jobs, investment and local spending v a fat nothing" then what's the alternative, really?
Wrong again. It's worth repeating. If Google, eBay or anyone else suddenly found the legal mechanisms they currently use to avoid tax were no longer available they would not cease doing business here.
If they did the market would look after itself and the void would be filled.
Don't forget Google make profits FROM the UK. That is from you and me and their UK customers. They can't do that if they cease trading here.
So any mechanism that can be dreamt up to get them to pay corporation tax is a safe and sure way to raise more revenue with no downside.