I'm not at all knowledgeable about corporation tax but if it is indeed so complex and difficult to quantify and collect, how about abolishing it across the EU and replacing it with a sales tax applicable to all EU goods and services levied at the point of transaction and standard across all EU countries (so effectively increase VAT)?
Boycott Amazon
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Originally posted by eighthobstruction View Post....I'll put my mind to it if I've got time (after I've taken my library books back and got some milk)....cannot be that hard surely ..... international finite resources and logistics versus total international profit....blow up Bahamas and Cayman Islands....Surely most companies derive their products and raw materials from all over the world??...
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Originally posted by aeolium View PostI'm not at all knowledgeable about corporation tax but if it is indeed so complex and difficult to quantify and collect, how about abolishing it across the EU and replacing it with a sales tax applicable to all EU goods and services levied at the point of transaction and standard across all EU countries (so effectively increase VAT)?
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostYes, many of them do, but I'm not just talking about that; one of the big issues that's been raised over this centres upon royalties and, as one who receives royalties in respect of intellectual property rights, I do know that copyrights and the rest are the kinds of absolute specialist minefields that any tax avoiding company will make the most of in order to hide what might otherwise be its liabilities to tax. Yes, I really do think that it would - and indeed will, if it proceeds - be very hard to ascertain exactly how much tax on what profits should be paid where. That's not to say that such matters should not be investigated but, if the job's to be done properly and if that's what people who are aggrieved about these companies' advantage-taking activities actually want, there'll be little use in complaining years down the line if the very costs of these exercises turn out to make them less productive than might at first have been hoped. Furthermore, such exercises (a) won't just involve a handful of the very largest alleged transgressors but all multinational companies great and small and (b) will presume the need for a great deal more thoroughgoing international co-operation than they're ever likely to achieve.bong ching
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Originally posted by ahinton View Postassessing what profits are "made in Britain" is not so easy as it might seem. The coffee beans that it turns into mostly overlarge cups of coffee are not exactly grown in Britain.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostIt's a thought, but apart from the sheer cost of doing this, there would need first to be harmonisation of VAT rates and rules across not just the Eurozone but the EU as a whole (i.e. not only what rates of VAT are to be applied but on what goods and services and with what specific exemptions) and I see no reason why it would be any easier to achieve that than it would to achieve EU-wide agreement on rates and rules of corporation tax.
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Originally posted by aeolium View PostWell, the loss of a lot of potential income to nations which are in many cases in desperate financial situations might concentrate minds towards some agreement. Whatever solution is found, there needs to be some change as the present position is unsustainable. It allows multinationals to exploit countries and enjoy an unfair advantage compared to nationally located companies which are unable to avoid paying corporation tax. Perhaps a widespread consumer boycott is the only way of driving home to these companies that they have some responsibility to the countries in which they operate and from which they profit (even if they don't pay any tax on that profit). People may be shareholders but they are also, for the most part, taxpayers and citizens and it is simply no good saying the thing is too complex. Even government ministers and select committees believe something needs to be done.
A consumer boycott - even if such could be generally agreed and implemented - would either be unfairly and ineffectively selective in seeking to make scapegoats of just one or two of the largest transgressors or so far-reaching as to bring the economies of most countries to their knees since, as I have stated, it's not just the biggest boys involved but many multinational companies; were all of their products and services to be boycotted, the firms that deal with them would risk going under and then the entire pack of cards would collapse, affecting all of us everywhere.
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostWell, obviously they have to pay for the raw materials, labour, premises etc. But they take that into account when setting the cost of the cup (or bucket) of coffee which, in most businesses, would include a profit. Apparently they manage to make no profit by having seperate companies, one of which owns the Starbucks brand for which Starbucks shops have to pay a licence. I would have thought, though, that that would be one of the elements in setting a price. Any company which doesn't take all these things into account, & therefore makes no profit would surely go out of business?
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A consumer boycott - even if such could be generally agreed and implemented - would either be unfairly and ineffectively selective in seeking to make scapegoats of just one or two of the largest transgressors or so far-reaching as to bring the economies of most countries to their knees since, as I have stated, it's not just the biggest boys involved but many multinational companies; were all of their products and services to be boycotted, the firms that deal with them would risk going under and then the entire pack of cards would collapse, affecting all of us everywhere.
I really don't have any qualms about "unfairness" in selecting out certain multinational companies, given the unfairness of their behaviour towards nationally-based rivals and wider society. Perhaps if they experienced some unfair treatment themselves it might give their directors some idea of how a lot of people feel about their actions.
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Originally posted by aeolium View PostThat is possible, although a much more likely situation is that widespread adverse publicity and withdrawal of consumer support for some large corporations (some have already been highlighted by UK Uncut campaigns) as well as pressure on the government would make the companies themselves realise that they need to improve their public image, as Starbucks seems to have done, and change their behaviour. I think Barclays also abandoned some aggressive tax avoidance schemes under public and government pressure, though they continued to assert that the schemes were legal.
To return to the intellectual property rights issue that is at the heart of some of this multinational corporate scheming, consider this. I have registered intellectual property rights in UK because that's where I live and am taxed. Were I to relocate to another country (e.g. France, to which I plan to relocate anyway in due course), I would have the choice either to re-register them there or leave them where they are now. If it would pay me to do the latter (which in the case of France it would, given the punitive social charges in that country), would that constitute "tax avoidance"? Yes, of course it would, because it's legal and I am entitled by both jurisdictions to make that choice. Would it be "immoral"? No more so than any other legitimate means of ensuring that I don't render myself liable to greater tax liability than is necessary. The scale would, of course, be minuscule but the principle, it seems to me, is not necessarily so different other than in that (as I mentioned earlier) it would not require fancy expensive tax lawyers to devise and implement a scheme in order to achieve this result; the only way around it, however, would be to ensure that the tax arrangements for such intellectual property between the two countries were identical, which would require the mutual agreement of those countries as well as that of EU. Likely? Hardly!Last edited by ahinton; 05-12-12, 14:34.
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I agree with Aeolium. tax at a high level will always be a dirty business.
(in case you missed it).
The public CAN affect what goes on , though. big companies don't like even small drops in turnover or falls in share price, since this is often how the high level execs are rewarded.
This stuff is going on all over the place, and fairness is impossible. It would be interesting if pressure was brought to bear by a rolling programme of boycotts, with perhaps a little notice so that the company in question could have the chance to get its wallet out, or face a month long "total" boycott.
The ideal group to organise this might be the Lib dems....oh no, silly me. Oh well, somebody else then.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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ts, I wonder whether even ahinton would manage to defend the behaviour of some of the individuals and organisations in that programme. I'm sure he would have a damned good try, though
UK Uncut is one organisation that is trying to highlight and take action on corporate tax avoidance. I think 38 Degrees and avaaz are also interesting themselves in it. Those in the major political parties are (as that programme indicated) the last people to take action as political parties are funded by the very wealthy individuals and corporations that practise tax avoidance. Still, even they have had to sit up and take notice of public concern.
Edit: This seems a good summary about the state of taxation in the UK at present.
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Originally posted by aeolium View Postts, I wonder whether even ahinton would manage to defend the behaviour of some of the individuals and organisations in that programme. I'm sure he would have a damned good try, though
UK Uncut is one organisation that is trying to highlight and take action on corporate tax avoidance. I think 38 Degrees and avaaz are also interesting themselves in it. Those in the major political parties are (as that programme indicated) the last people to take action as political parties are funded by the very wealthy individuals and corporations that practise tax avoidance. Still, even they have had to sit up and take notice of public concern.
Edit: This seems a good summary about the state of taxation in the UK at present.
never mind, there is the prospect of a royal baby to cheer us through the long winter...and as SKY news told us yesterday (on the telly at the vets, not in my home) "The world celebrates news of the royal pregnancy".
No really.
And the cats are fine, thanks, just the annual booster.
Edit, I'll check those links to 38 degrees and avaaz.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostI agree with Aeolium. tax at a high level will always be a dirty business.
(in case you missed it).
The public CAN affect what goes on , though. big companies don't like even small drops in turnover or falls in share price, since this is often how the high level execs are rewarded.
Again, though, to the extent that the issue arises from what might be argued to be an immoral manipulation of the intellectual property rights laws of many countries, might not such boycotts also run the risk of becoming premature sledgehammers wielded at the wrong angles and thus failing to crack the nuts?Last edited by ahinton; 05-12-12, 15:03.
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Originally posted by aeolium View Postts, I wonder whether even ahinton would manage to defend the behaviour of some of the individuals and organisations in that programme. I'm sure he would have a damned good try, though
Originally posted by aeolium View PostUK Uncut is one organisation that is trying to highlight and take action on corporate tax avoidance. I think 38 Degrees and avaaz are also interesting themselves in it. Those in the major political parties are (as that programme indicated) the last people to take action as political parties are funded by the very wealthy individuals and corporations that practise tax avoidance. Still, even they have had to sit up and take notice of public concern.
that are sponsored by government itself - and, incidentally, I note that, in his winter speech, the Chancellot [what a fortuitous and even serendipitous typo that was, upthread!) has cut the level of tax avoidance offered by the former while expanding that offered by the latter). Show me a corporation of any size that does not practise tax avoidance of any kind! They always have and always will, which is no reason not to try to go after them for it when it's deemed to be immoral or to change the laws allowing it accordingly, but intent is no guarantee of success because people are dreaming up new schemes all the time and will always do so.
In addition, it is always worth bearing in mind that, as "the correct amount of tax" for which an individual or corporation is liable is only ever what the government of the day determines that it shall be, there is really no such thing - at least in "moral" terms" - as "the correct amount of tax"; there is only such a thing in legal terms, defined by the rates, thresholds and the rest imposed by any government at any given time and which will all change soon anyway, just as will the governments themselves.
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