Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Google Businesses EU The Almighty Buck

Google Now Pays More Money in EU Fines Than it Pays in Taxes (computing.co.uk) 109

An anonymous reader writes: Google owner Alphabet has reported annual and quarterly revenues up again, largely on the back of increasing market share in online advertising. The company reported fourth quarter revenues up 22 per cent to $39.28 billion, while annual revenues were up 23 per cent to $136.8 billion. And the company also took the time to separate out "European Commission fines" in its consolidated statements of income in the company's accounts. These increased from $2.7 billion in 2017 to $5.1 billion in 2018, with a further 50 million euro already set to be added to the bill for its first quarter and 2019 accounts, thanks to French data protection authority CNIL.That fine compares to a provision for income taxes of just $4.2 billion for 2018, or 12 per cent of its pre-tax income.

Net income for the full year increased by a 143 per cent from $12.67 billion to $30.74 billion thanks largely to a radically lower provision for income taxes - down from $14.5 billion to just $4.2 billion. The company attributed this tax boost down to the US Tax Act of 2017, which had depressed net income in 2017. This had "resulted in additional tax expense of $9.9 billion in the fourth quarter of 2017, primarily due to the one-time transition tax on accumulated foreign subsidiary earnings and deferred tax effects", the company claimed in its earnings release.

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Google Now Pays More Money in EU Fines Than it Pays in Taxes

Comments Filter:
  • by TomR teh Pirate ( 1554037 ) on Wednesday February 06, 2019 @05:46PM (#58081028)
    From the article, one cannot tell what the fines are attributable to. For example, if the fines are in fact a form of back-pay on some of the taxes, then the comparison doesn't really make much sense. Google is presumably run by rational people who are working to optimize their bottom line.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      GDPR violations mostly. Google didn't specify in their listing either, they just said "EU com fines" and put up a total. They don't want people to remember they were for violations of EU privacy laws right at frontal lobe level.

  • Are their accountants doing their job? Clearly their lawyers need more practice, or is that the Bag Men who've dropped the ball?
    • The lawyers promised everything was legal, even though they weren't doing any of it the way that the governments involved had written the regulations, and then later the governments had their own lawyers look at it, and those lawyers pointed out it was never legal, and they'd know if it was legal because google would be following the regulations as written.

      Loopholes are something that doesn't exist, that your lawyer promises will continue to not exist. The government might look the other way, but they also

  • They're "You're making too much, we're going to invent a reason you're bad, and retroactively fine you to fund our pork projects!" taxes.

    • Of course, it's a lot easier to take if from someone else than to work for it

  • EU is pulling a fast one to get their coffers full by raiding American companies. They have no intention of raiding their own companies. BUT, the real issue is that there are so many tax loopholes all over the world, combined with brick/mortar vs internet vs service. Western nations are having difficulty. What is needed is for the western nations to get together, perhaps at G12, and discuss how to deal with taxation of companies.
    • by rtb61 ( 674572 ) on Wednesday February 06, 2019 @11:43PM (#58082232) Homepage

      It is easy. All taxes should be paid at point of revenue and all cost deductions should be proven and the associated profits with those deductions even offshore ones, should be taxed. So no matter where the cost goes, the profits associated with it are taxed as if they occured locally at the point of revenue, no profit shifting should be allowed. Not able to prove the cost and profit in a different country, pay tax on total revenue and tough luck on the loss.

      All taxes should be paid at point of revenue, the location where the customer spent their money.

      • This is a joke, right?
        "All taxes should be paid at point of revenue"
        Okay - so I buy a chocolate - and pay tax where I buy it. Yep checks out.
        Okay - so I buy a song - and pay tax at my house. Yep checks out.
        Okay - so I travel to the EU and buy a song and pay tax in the EU. Pay tax in the EU from my US phone transaction from a US company... Uh...
        Okay - so I am referred to a Japanese site from a US company from my French search. The Japanese site paid a UK company for the referral. The French search was

      • U would think so.
        I continue to suggest that we should have the Delivery service pick up a sales tax on shipped goods.
        Of course, you then run into services. I can see companies simply shifting their services to other nations to avoid having to pay taxes, but it strikes me as bizarre that the west is NOT working together to prevent all of this.

        I get why EU is doing the massive penalties on American companies. Basically, it is their current approach to get the taxes they believe owed. BUT, until we stop
  • Tax Breaks to Europe (Score:4, Informative)

    by sdinfoserv ( 1793266 ) on Wednesday February 06, 2019 @06:16PM (#58081226)
    So as the US Federal Government goes deeper into debt to fund Corporate Tax Breaks, the EU gladly hands down fines to collect the dollars those same companies are NOT paying in infrastructure reinvestment, average worker wages and benefits.
    What part of Reaganomics "trickledown" lead to raising taxes on the middle class 11 times in Reagan's 8 years are lost on people. Stop buying the "trickledown" lies.
    • not compared to the profits let alone the cost of running a government and associated services. If google can get out of paying taxes for fines they're way, way ahead.

      You're dead right about trickle down economics. Here in the states we changed the name to "Job Creators" and that stuck. Never underestimate the power of think tanks & focus groups.
    • "Fund" a tax break? How does one "fund" a tax break? The government's failure to collect a percentage of money (via legal coercion) earned by an entity creating something of value is not "funding." I'm not saying that taxation is wrong per se, but to have an honest discussion about taxes and corporatism, we need to acknowledge that the government cannot "fund" a tax break. In the meantime, the EU with its non-representative, unelected, bureaucratic governance is not something to hold up as an example, espec

  • should block all foreign internet, ALL OF IT, and let the rest of the world wonder what happened to the internet for a few weeks, and watch what they say and do, i am sure it will have a dramatic effect since the biggest root servers that make all the domain names are located in the USA
    • by jemmyw ( 624065 )
      I'm not sure what effect you're after, but if you believe that will make the rest of the world go "oh gosh, we better not piss off amercian corporations again" I think you might be disappointed. If the desire is to keep control for as long as possible then not giving the world a good reason to build their own infrastructure is probably the best course.

      It would also seriously impact the business of those mega corps. Again, not sure what your goal is, but its probably not beneficial to the american economy as
    • by Anonymous Coward

      You are so dumb you should be in government with Trump.
      Here is what will happen.
      The rest of the world will realise relying on the USA is a BAD thing, so they will build competing services. They will also try to limit their financial exposure to the whims of the USA and will choose to build stronger relationships with a wider base.
      Then there is the 2.5 Trillion in exports that is put at risk, how many jobs would be gone if that gets even a 5% drop ?

      Over 80% of the worlds economy does not involve the USA.

      Per

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Otherwise they would have changed to conform with the law.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Well that it news to me I always belivedthat it is themember states that do the taxsation, foes the EU realy tax any entety directly? Inthis context thas is impotant because if the EU dos not tax anyone, butissues fines it wouldbe rather easyto pat themmoreinfinesthan i taxes.

Don't tell me how hard you work. Tell me how much you get done. -- James J. Ling

Working...