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The Almighty Buck Businesses

Amazon Had Sales Income of $53 Billion in Europe in 2020 But Paid No Corporation Tax (theguardian.com) 305

Fresh questions have been raised over Amazon's tax planning after its latest corporate filings in Luxembourg revealed that the company collected record sales income of $53 billion in Europe last year but did not have to pay any corporation tax to the Grand Duchy. From a report: Accounts for Amazon EU Sarl, through which it sells products to hundreds of millions of households in the UK and across Europe, show that despite collecting record income, the Luxembourg unit made a $1.4 billion loss and therefore paid no tax. In fact the unit was granted $67.3 million in tax credits it can use to offset any future tax bills should it turn a profit. The company has $3.25 billion worth of carried forward losses stored up, which can be used against any tax payable on future profits. Margaret Hodge, a Labour MP who has long campaigned against tax avoidance, said: "It seems that Amazon's relentless campaign of appalling tax avoidance continues."

"Amazon's revenues have soared under the pandemic while our high streets struggle, yet it continues to shift its profits to tax havens like Luxembourg to avoid paying its fair share of tax. These big digital companies all rely on our public services, our infrastructure, and our educated and healthy workforce. But unlike smaller businesses and hard-working taxpayers, the tech giants fail to pay fairly into the common pot for the common good. President Biden has proposed a new, fairer system for taxing large corporations and digital companies but the UK has not come out in support of the reforms. The silence is deafening. The government must act and help to grasp this once-in-a-generation opportunity to banish corporate tax avoidance to a thing of the past."

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Amazon Had Sales Income of $53 Billion in Europe in 2020 But Paid No Corporation Tax

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  • Income vs revenue? (Score:3, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 04, 2021 @09:10AM (#61346134)
    Corporations are taxed on income, not revenue. Uber also pays no tax despite having billions of dollars of revenue because they lose money every year.
    • by nucrash ( 549705 ) on Tuesday May 04, 2021 @09:19AM (#61346164)

      Yes, but they use tax loopholes to shift what is normally considered profit, and shift that money into "expenses."
      This becomes problematic when extremely large companies uses these "expenses" to expand their company to the point where they monopolize an industry by buying out the competition.
      This could be good in a way that things like research and development expenses get a tax deduction. But then they start filing everything into research and development even though they aren't really researching and developing anything that is patented or gives back to society.
      Some larger companies will buy up smaller companies purely for the sake of finding a way to spend/lose money to avoid taxes. They eliminate a future competitor and avoid paying taxes all in the same move.

      Though trying to legislate ways to close the loopholes is a cluster. For every loophole you think gets closed, the creative minds on the other end will create new ways to craft loopholes into the legislation. They then fund lobbyists to talk lawmakers into including these loopholes into new tax laws.

      The entire process seemingly has no end in sight.

      • Didn't every single employee pay taxes on their income?

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        Though trying to legislate ways to close the loopholes is a cluster. For every loophole you think gets closed, the creative minds on the other end will create new ways to craft loopholes into the legislation. They then fund lobbyists to talk lawmakers into including these loopholes into new tax laws.

        So, working as intended, then? The politicians get money from the corporations, the corporations get tax breaks from the politicians. Everyone (who counts) wins!

        • by smooth wombat ( 796938 ) on Tuesday May 04, 2021 @11:41AM (#61346858) Journal
          So, working as intended, then? The politicians get money from the corporations, the corporations get tax breaks from the politicians. Everyone (who counts) wins!

          Not any longer. Ted Cruz has openly stated Republicans will no longer listen to corporations who have a problem with voter restrictions and will no longer do their bidding [businessinsider.com].

          "This is the point in the drama when Republicans usually shrug their shoulders, call these companies 'job creators,' and start to cut their taxes. Not this time," Cruz wrote in the op-ed.

          "This time, we won't look the other way on Coca-Cola's $12 billion in back taxes owed."

          "This time, when Major League Baseball lobbies to preserve its multibillion-dollar antitrust exception, we'll say no thank you. This time, when Boeing asks for billions in corporate welfare, we'll simply let the Export-Import Bank expire."

          As Ted said, "For too long, Republicans have allowed the left and their big-business allies to attack our values with no response."

          And by values he means making sure the 1% get their tax breaks, businesses pay little to no taxes, and Republicans get to run roughsod over the people such as not raising the minimum wage or making sure all people have the same rights.

      • by Nabeel_co ( 1045054 ) on Tuesday May 04, 2021 @09:38AM (#61346252) Homepage

        Yes, but they use tax loopholes to shift what is normally considered profit, and shift that money into "expenses."

        Reinvesting profits into development isn't a tax loophole.

        • by Joce640k ( 829181 ) on Tuesday May 04, 2021 @09:49AM (#61346310) Homepage

          No, but sending all your European customers useless Luxembourg VAT invoices that they can't use in their own country is .

          (Yes, I've got one of those...it only took me three weeks to get it out of Amazon and when it finally turned up I couldn't use it anyway)

          • No, but sending all your European customers useless Luxembourg VAT invoices that they can't use in their own country is .

            What's a VAT invoice?

            • by Joce640k ( 829181 ) on Tuesday May 04, 2021 @10:43AM (#61346566) Homepage

              No, but sending all your European customers useless Luxembourg VAT invoices that they can't use in their own country is .

              What's a VAT invoice?

              It's a document that allows you to reclaim sales tax on business expenses.

              (VAT = sales tax)

              The trouble is that if I buy something on amazon.es (ie. where I live) and the page says "sold by amazon.es" on it, I'd expect an invoice for that country. Amazon seems to think differently so they route everything through Luxembourg.

              (and presumably keep my 21% sales tax for themselves)

            • by SteelCamel ( 7612342 ) on Tuesday May 04, 2021 @11:00AM (#61346666)

              VAT (Value Added Tax) is the European equivalent of Sales Tax. It works a bit differently, though - VAT is charged on every sale, not just to consumers. So when a company buys materials, they will pay VAT. They make a product, sell it to customers, and the customers pay VAT. Each company collects VAT and sends it to the tax authority. However, to avoid double-charging, they can deduct the VAT they paid on stuff they bought from the VAT they collected, and only send the difference to the tax authority. They're paying tax on the difference between the cost of materials and the sales price - in other words, on the "value added", hence the name of the tax. OK, in reality the rules are a lot more complex, but that's the basic idea. And you'll see that ultimately it's the end customer ends up paying the VAT, as they have no-one to charge it to - everyone else gets back what they paid when buying when they sell.

              However, there's different rates of VAT, some items are exempt, and small companies don't have to register. But you need to be sure how much VAT you paid, so you know how much to deduct before you pay the taxman. And you do need to be sure, otherwise you'll be in a lot of trouble when you get it wrong. So any company registered for VAT has to provide certain information when you buy from them - mainly how much VAT they charged, and their registration details such as a VAT number. This is known as a "VAT invoice" as it's an invoice that shows all the information required for VAT compliance, as opposed to a regular invoice which may not. Some companies issue all invoices as VAT invoices automatically (after all, it's just a couple of extra bits of information - add the VAT number with the address and phone number, and include the VAT calculation you have to do anyway), others issue invoices missing some of this information and you specifically have to ask for a "VAT Invoice" to get one you can use for VAT.

              I'm not sure why the previous poster says Amazon are issuing "useless Luxembourg VAT invoices" - in the EU VAT is explicitly cross-border, while the rates vary between countries the principle is the same - deduct VAT paid from VAT charged, whatever country it was in. A VAT invoice from any EU country should be as good as any other.

      • Yes, but they use tax loopholes to shift what is normally considered profit, and shift that money into "expenses." This becomes problematic when extremely large companies uses these "expenses" to expand their company to the point where they monopolize an industry by buying out the competition.

        Well to be fair, creating a soul-crushing monopoly, isn't cheap.

        The CEO's active volcano lair? With these real estate prices?

      • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

        Its not really how it works though from a government revenue perspective. Whatever company A might write off as an expense purchasing company B; the owners of B will pay out capital gains on.

        It shifts the tax liability but it does not eliminate it. B's owners know they will be paying taxes so that gets figured into the sale price they are willing to accept (in theory).

        The real issue as you say is bigger companies have a lot more flexibility making investments which is already and economy of scale and the t

      • by dargaud ( 518470 )
        I never understood why companies are allowed to buy other companies (*). If the owner wants to buy with his own money, fine. But the excuse that it helps them grow faster never convinced me. And it allows them to build webs of deceit and hide things with ease.
        (*) It seems like allowing pets to own pets.
    • by teg ( 97890 ) on Tuesday May 04, 2021 @09:28AM (#61346188)

      Corporations are taxed on income, not revenue. Uber also pays no tax despite having billions of dollars of revenue because they lose money every year.

      Mostly correct. There is a fundamental difference, though: Noone doubts that Uber loses money at this time. However, in the case of Amazon others like them politicians and the public don't see it as "OK, that giant company lost money. We can't tax them then" but more of a "this giant multinational giant is earning a lot of money, but is using tax avoidance and loopholes to avoid paying its fair share of taxes here. That's not fair to society, or to national competitors". Taxes is the price of society, and when someone pays less everyone else has to pay more. New rules are obviously needed, and if giant corporations continue to behave like this taxing that category of companies on revenue rather than income might be a possible solution. Having a "no tax" for multinationals just isn't a workable solution.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Amazon doesn't lose money, they make piles of it. They just make it look like a loss on paper so they don't have to pay any tax.

      If they accidentally do make a paper profit they write that off against previous years paper losses.

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by jellomizer ( 103300 )

      We should just drop corporate tax all together or make a uniform flat tax.
      Of course if we were to drop corporate tax, we would probably need to make sure that things like CEO mansions, and yachts or Stock options that are applied directly to them, are not flagged as a business expense but a personal expense to the individual.

      If we were to have a flat tax, it would need to include value add tax, where every time a transaction is generated will be taxed.

      The current progressive tax system, while seems good on

      • by kenh ( 9056 ) on Tuesday May 04, 2021 @10:45AM (#61346578) Homepage Journal

        If you tax businesses on revenues, not profits, you WILK force countless marginal companies out of business - many/most retail shop owners generate minimal profits, thus pay little in taxes - start taxing them on their receipts, they'll fold almost immediately.

      • Flat taxes grossly benefit the wealthy and shift the tax burden to the middle class and poor.

        Great idea for those that are poor at math.

    • Corporations are taxed on income, not revenue. Uber also pays no tax despite having billions of dollars of revenue because they lose money every year.

      Potatoes, potatoes ... There should be a limit on how long you can report losses to get out of paying taxes. There are companies who for tax purposes have supposedly been making losses for decades now and with no end in sight. I know companies can sometimes legitimately suffer losses and there is nothing wrong with that, but eventually a company should be forced to get itself in order, make money (i.e. generate income) and be taxed whether it wants to or not. I'm sick and tired of watching these corporation

    • This should be the same for people then. Let me deduct all the money I spend on housing, food, clothing, transport, etc and I'll just pay tax if I have any left over at the end of the year.

    • Most young families have revenue but no income. Why can't individuals count their income against a mortgage and credit cards. Seems to be something of an inalienable right for corporations.

      • Why can't individuals count their income against a mortgage and credit cards.

        Well, most people (at least in the US) do get a tax break due to their home mortgage.

        • If you paid $20k a year in mortgage you don't get to take $20k off your taxes. Even if you paid $5k in interest you don't get to take $5k off your taxes, you only get to move your basis. Basically some tiny fraction of your debt's interest payment is non-taxable for this one category of debt. You don't get to do that with a car loan federally or in most states.

          If I'm a business I get to take my revenue (before profits) and use them for expenses. If I buy a building as a headquarters instead of counting that

  • by davide marney ( 231845 ) on Tuesday May 04, 2021 @09:16AM (#61346156) Journal

    Every year at tax time this same hoary old argument comes up. If a corporation doesn't pay taxes, it's precisely because it is following the rules that allows it to do so. There are so many loopholes in the world's tax codes and regulations, there's simply no need to do anything but hire your armies of tax attorneys and accountants and do things the good, old-fashioned -- and perfectly legal -- way.

    • by nagora ( 177841 )

      Every year at tax time this same hoary old argument comes up. If a corporation doesn't pay taxes, it's precisely because it is following the rules that allows it to do so. There are so many loopholes in the world's tax codes and regulations, there's simply no need to do anything but hire your armies of tax attorneys and accountants and do things the good, old-fashioned -- and perfectly legal -- way.

      Sure. It's dishonest but not illegal.

      Actually, it probably is illegal as well but it's so well covered up that it's impossible to prove.

      I'm not really sure what point you were making anyway. So what if it's legal? They're still thieving bastards.

      • The point is every year the same damn thing comes up, and every year people blame the tax-payer instead of the tax-collector. You want change? Blame the government.

    • What are you on about? Nobody is suggesting Amazon did anything illegal, instead they're lamenting the fact that there are so many loopholes to be abused. The argument is that the loopholes should be closed and Amazon should have to...gasp...pay something in taxes.
  • by magarity ( 164372 ) on Tuesday May 04, 2021 @09:33AM (#61346218)

    Expenses get passed to customers in the form of prices. If you want customers to pay more, raise the corporate income tax collection. Or be honest about it and replace income taxes with use (sales) taxes.

    • by Carewolf ( 581105 ) on Tuesday May 04, 2021 @09:38AM (#61346250) Homepage

      LOL. No.

      If the company could charge more they would already be charging more. They are not charities running a thin as possible profit margin. They maximimize profits, and charges as much as they possible can. Increased expenses cuts into profits until they might have to drop unprofitable products, but they can't just pass it on.

      • You're partially correct. Any company can also reduce the workforce, reduce hours, reduce benefits, cut corners on safety and enviromental issues, automate and robotize the warehouses and job functions, outsource to low cost countries and I'm sure many more things I haven't thought of. About all they won't do is cut the total take home pay of the officers. But the bottom line remains that no company stays in business if they aren't making a profit. So if you raise taxes on them - any type of taxes - and the

        • You have to remember corporations compete with private citizens for many goods especially real estate, if you let them live tax free and put the entire burden on real people, you have just created a new aristocracy.

          Also keep in mind any person can incorporate themselves, and thus gain the same benefits if you make the rules THAT silly.

      • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

        Provide you are not a monopoly; what you can charge depends on what you competition is willing to sell for. Presumable competitors have somewhat similar cost structure to your own business.

        The supply curve is shifted by the tax burden in some fashion. if you increase or decrease the tax burden the competitions willingness to supply shifts, and when it does yours can as well. The result of raising taxes on business will either be that prices go up - for things where the demand is inelastic, or the amount o

    • That's a fair point. EU countries have VAT, which Amazon certainly pays. Are corporate income taxes actually necessary? It's a fair question, especially since corporate taxes can be avoided by companies big enough to use double Irish coffee marshmallow sandwiches.
  • by kenh ( 9056 ) on Tuesday May 04, 2021 @09:36AM (#61346234) Homepage Journal

    Accounts for Amazon EU Sarl, through which it sells products to hundreds of millions of households in the UK and across Europe, show that despite collecting record income, the Luxembourg unit made a $1.4 billion loss and therefore paid no tax. In fact the unit was granted $67.3 million in tax credits it can use to offset any future tax bills should it turn a profit. The company has $3.25 billion worth of carried forward losses stored up, which can be used against any tax payable on future profits.

    Amazon had losses of $1.4BN, therefore it owed no taxes. Even if Amazon had booked several billion in profits, they would have simply applied some or all of their carried-forward losses to offset the profits and pay no taxes.

    The fundamental issue is that companies like Amazon, General Electric, and others simply have better accountants than the politicians that draft the tax laws. A few years ago, in America, we had a politician that was the head of the Ways snd Means Committee in Congress, which, among other things is responsible for writing the tax code. This individual, the literal person responsible for creating the tax codes claimed he had no idea that he owed US taxes on income earned from foreign rental properties. (This same politician had several rent-controlled apartments in a housing project in Harlem, violating several regulations. His name was Charlie Rangel, congressman from Harlem, NYC.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2008/0... [nytimes.com]

    If you want better tax codes, elect better politicians.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      It's not that politicians don't understand it, at least in Europe. They understand very well, the issue is that these loopholes exist because of differences between international tax laws (e.g. the famous "Double Irish") or because one of the involved countries is a tax haven (in this case Luxemburg).

      The EU knows how to fix it and is working on doing it, but it takes a lot of agreement from a lot of people. That's why some EU countries have tried to force the issue, like France with its digital retailer tax

  • It used to be "no taxation without representation" for the citizenry.

    Maybe now we need "no market access without taxation" for the corporations.

    In effect, governments should charge corporations for access to consumers as a new form of tax. Weighted heavily towards hitting the pockets of purely digital services that can relocate a server farm on a whim.

    • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

      I would settle for no-representation without taxation toward the citizenry as a first step.

      That goes for people - didn't pay any net taxes this year - then you don't get a vote

      and corporations -
      didn't pay taxes (as a some minimal amount vs your book value) then you are not allowed to make any campaign contributions, and expressly forbidden to speak with any elected official or anyone outside their statutory reporting structure - ie you can talk someone at the DAs office about the vandalism to your equipment

      • >That goes for people - didn't pay any net taxes this year - then you don't get a vote

        Did you just suggest making the poor 2nd class citizens without a voice in the government that is controlling their lives?

        That's a really, really bad idea. Unless you like slavery.

  • Can Europeans please explain? I thought VAT solved this problem.

    ---

    Of course, in general, corporations should not be paying tax on income. Jurisdiction is intangible, I imagine my company's profits are all on the moon... so no tax. Sales are tangible, they happen in a specific jurisdiction, and we have mechanisms in place to track the movement of things across borders. So sales tax is the only feasible solution... so I'm surprised Europe isn't working

    • by nagora ( 177841 )

      Can Europeans please explain? I thought VAT solved this problem.

      VAT is the most unfair of taxes and should be phased out.

    • amazon pays VAT like any other business that operates in the EU. They pay VAT on the things that they buy and collect it on the things that they sell. They pass the difference to the respective governments. That's how an 'End User Sales Tax works'.
      What Amazon doesn't pay is any tax on their profits. They also scam the property taxes. The corner shop in my town probably pays more in property taxes than the giant amazon warehouse outside of town. That's Bezos for you. Nickle and diming everyone.

  • by argStyopa ( 232550 ) on Tuesday May 04, 2021 @09:48AM (#61346304) Journal

    ...stop acting like it is. (Assuming they are legally following the rules.)

    How much extra taxes did YOU pay to your government, voluntarily, above what you were required to?

    Amazon is no more obligated to pay more than you are.

    If you're pissed about this, if this seems unfair, then talk to your legislators WHO WRITE THE RULES.

    Stop fucking bitching that successful companies somehow have this "special moral obligation" ... that nobody feels they themselves have, by the way.

    • It is very much Amazon's fault because Amazon doesn't naturally exist as a couple of companies which pretend to bill each other in a way that just so happens to minimize profit in the countries where Amazon generates all its revenue and maximizes profits where Amazon doesn't do any work but pays no taxes on profits. To anyone who isn't a piece of shit tax lawyer or lobbyist, it is completely obvious that they are lying about their profits to evade taxes.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      Yeah, when I'm in the position to bribe Senators and Congressmen the way corporations do, I'll get back to you on that. And maybe you've noticed that state and federal electoral districts are so thoroughly gerrymandered that even legislation supported by seven or eight out of ten voters doesn't even get discussed. Do you think "talking to legislators who write the rules" will have any effect?

      Are you really that fucking stupid?

    • by quantaman ( 517394 ) on Tuesday May 04, 2021 @10:35AM (#61346530)

      ...stop acting like it is. (Assuming they are legally following the rules.)

      How much extra taxes did YOU pay to your government, voluntarily, above what you were required to?

      Amazon is no more obligated to pay more than you are.

      If you're pissed about this, if this seems unfair, then talk to your legislators WHO WRITE THE RULES.

      Stop fucking bitching that successful companies somehow have this "special moral obligation" ... that nobody feels they themselves have, by the way.

      There's a difference between not paying extra tax for no reason and hiring an army of accountants to exploit every loophole imaginable, including moving your headquarters to another country.

      And do understand this is a bad thing. For a small business to spend $1,000,000 on accounting fees to save 0.5% of tax would be ridiculous, for Amazon it's a bargain. Having the funds to exploit the tax code is one of the things that makes rich companies and individuals richer for no other reason than the fact they're already rich.

      Now yes, the best solution is getting the legislators to write better laws. But companies already do a lot of "good" actions because of public pressure, environmental cleanups, minority hiring, supporting of voting rights, charitable donations, etc, etc. Why is it suddenly illegitimate for us to demand responsible use of the tax code as another social norm they should adhere to?

      If nothing else it would help give the legislators political cover to fix the tax code.

  • by JBMcB ( 73720 ) on Tuesday May 04, 2021 @10:23AM (#61346470)

    Taxes on corporate profits are dumb. They are difficult to estimate, especially in large, sprawling companies. It's easy to craft taxes that are both too large and too small, depending on what kind of business you are and how you make your money.

    VAT is the way to go. Tax all money moving through the corporation. The silly thing is that most EU countries have VAT ON TOP of corporate taxes. Just get rid of corporate taxes, which are difficult to collect, and crank up the VAT, which is easy to collect.

    VAT is far from perfect, but it is relatively simple, and Occam's Razor and all.

    • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

      Pretty much this. Honestly we should replace the entire federal tax code in the US with something like:

      1) A national sales tax - this needs to apply to just about every transaction buyer always pays. That needs to include purchases of securities etc! (get rid of capital gains).

      2) Create some exceptions for retail purchases of certain goods like non-prepared food items, clothing that is not considered luxury (x% cotton or synthetic ), public transit, municipal fees.

      3) Make it a little more progressive by al

  • That first, corporations don't pay taxes, they treat taxation as an expense, and it becomes a cost of doing business. EBITDA being one expression of that reality.

    But given that, governments use a variety of means to acquire revenue and redistribute wealth, such as VAT, pure sales tax, inheritance taxes, property taxes. license fees, etc. We can ignore the validity or proper use of these finds, and move on to considering relative fairness, right?

    Perhaps, in the US, since there is such a thing as a personal i

  • Taxable income is revenue minus cost of goods sold.

  • Corporations do not limit liability. They transfer liability from the investor class to the rest of society.

    Most of society can have no benefit from LLCs, they can't afford to invest in one. "LLC", "Limited Liability Corporations" work like this:

    Bill Gates, Jeff Bezos, and Mark Zuckerberg see an exciting new fracking technology, invest $10M each into an LLC to test it out. The $30M corporation drills some new wells and try out, umm, "superfracking". It gets way out of hand and fracks a kilometre above the drill zone, causing natural gas and oil to percolate up into the water table, and do $30B in damage to the water table. Whole towns have to start shipping in water, until long pipelines can be built. One town shrinks until it folds up.

    Bill, Jeff, and Mark are on the hook for exactly $30M, or whatever money is left in the corporate coffers after the drilling. They actually have the money, personally, to compensate the public for the $30B in damages, but that's not their personal problem. All blame, all bucks stop at the LLC.

    Society frequently suffers financial loss from LLCs, of many kinds, mostly in the area of reduced public health and damaged environment, but courts every single day leave members of the public with a few cents on the dollar of losses inflicted upon them by LLCs. (One of the biggest is wage theft, basically the investor class stealing from the working class: it's the largest form of theft in dollar terms, bigger than burglary, car theft, etc.)

    To compensate society for its losses, special taxes heaped upon corporations, on top of the income taxes the investors bear, are completely morally justifiable, because of this phenomenon.

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