Sorry, ahinton, we will just have to agree to disagree here. I do believe tax avoidance by multinationals is immoral and I don't believe that nothing can be done about it.
Boycott Amazon
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Originally posted by aeolium View PostSorry, ahinton, we will just have to agree to disagree here. I do believe tax avoidance by multinationals is immoral and I don't believe that nothing can be done about it.
As to the intellectual property issue, one thing that makes it far more elusive than actual physical trading and the supply of goods and most services in particular locations is that, like the internet, they are not location sensitive or bound; as long as it remains possible to register such rights anywhere that their owners choose, their values will generally fall under the jurisdictions of those countries where they are located. I don't really see what can be done about that unless every nation on earth that has intellectual property rights legislation on its statute books agrees to adopt a taxation régime in respect of them that's identical to that of every other country so that no future tax advantages could be taken by means of prudent location of registrations. It's not gong to happen, though, is it? The only other way around this would be for global agreement to annul at a stroke all intellectual property values everywhere in order to create a level playing field, although this would adversely affect composers, novelists, scientists, academics and many others, even including governments (Crown copyright, anyone?), as well as reducing the values of those large multinationals so much as to affect everyone who invests in them directly or indirectly (i.e. almost all of us).
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Simon
Just heard a trail on R4 - this very subject is to be discussed on R4s "The Moral Maze".
Meant to add "at 8pm today".
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Lateralthinking1
I haven't read all of this thread as I know the arguments people put forward. Can anyone explain to me though why there is suddenly all this focus on Starbucks, Amazon and Google? What makes them different from all of the other big companies? I genuinely don't understand it. Is it that they have paid virtually nothing whereas the others have paid a tiny amount?
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Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View PostI haven't read all of this thread as I know the arguments people put forward. Can anyone explain to me though why there is suddenly all this focus on Starbucks, Amazon and Google? What makes them different from all of the other big companies? I genuinely don't understand it. Is it that they have paid virtually nothing whereas the others have paid a tiny amount?
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostThat's about it, I think; I've already implied that a handful of the largest multinationals accused of transgressing morals applicable to the British tax system are, rightly or wrongly, being put forward as potential scapegoats for alleged wrongdoing and immorality whedreas almost every incorporated entity might as easily be accused - again, rightly or wrongly - of similar such transgressions and immorality on smaller scales.
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Originally posted by Frances_iom View Posttreat them like admirals - hang one to encourage the others - reducing Starbucks income by say 30-40% would be a good start, easy to organise and unmistakeable - a EU-wide boycot would be even better as no doubt they are avoiding taxes in most states other than Ireland - as you say there are many others that could also be targeted by the public in the future.
The intellectual property rights aspect of all this hasn't really been answered here yet either. That and all the aspects of what taxes should be paid where needs to be properly established before any action is taken; I'm not ruling out the possibility of action but it has to be the right action otherwise it might not even work.
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I have seen another argument which might apply to companies such as Starbucks. The argument is that they employ a large number of people in the UK, buy and sell goods here, and that overall, even if they paid no tax that the economic activity they stimulate is beneficial to the country, as tax is paid on much of the activity they indulge in and also by those who pay for their services and products.
In the USA there was discussion during the Bush era (GW I think) re this, as one argument was that if firms were made to pay corporation tax (or whatever is equivalent there) then effectively the same activities were being taxed twice. Why there is anything special about those activities being taxed twice I can't see. I pay tax when I earn money and also when I spend it, so one could argue that "my" money has been subject to tax more than once, and if one looks at what happens further down the line there will be more tax paid by others in the chain.
I'm not defending the argument, just pointing it out.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostI have seen another argument which might apply to companies such as Starbucks. The argument is that they employ a large number of people in the UK, buy and sell goods here, and that overall, even if they paid no tax that the economic activity they stimulate is beneficial to the country, as tax is paid on much of the activity they indulge in and also by those who pay for their services and products.
In the USA there was discussion during the Bush era (GW I think) re this, as one argument was that if firms were made to pay corporation tax (or whatever is equivalent there) then effectively the same activities were being taxed twice. Why there is anything special about those activities being taxed twice I can't see. I pay tax when I earn money and also when I spend it, so one could argue that "my" money has been subject to tax more than once, and if one looks at what happens further down the line there will be more tax paid by others in the chain.
I'm not defending the argument, just pointing it out.
One of the arguments put up against IHT (Inheritance Tax) is that it is more often than not a tax on already taxed assets. You are, of course, right to point out that this is not particularly exceptional when you write "I pay tax when I earn money and also when I spend it" (by which I presume you to mean when you spend it on goods and services that attract some VAT), but then, to me, that points up one of the immoralities of VAT in that I do not believe that any funds should be taxed more than once and that, when they are, they serve only to demonstrate fundamental structural flaws in an already overbearingly complex tax system.
My experience also leads me to question why some countries that I've never even visited deduct tax from income generated in them that would otherwise go to HM Treasury; there's really only a hair's breadth, it seems to me, between the effect of big multinationals being able to choose where they pay their taxes and that of little self-employed sole traders like me having that "choice" enforced uponr them.
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Resurrection Man
Originally posted by Lateralthinking1 View PostI haven't read all of this thread as I know the arguments people put forward. Can anyone explain to me though why there is suddenly all this focus on Starbucks, Amazon and Google? What makes them different from all of the other big companies? I genuinely don't understand it. Is it that they have paid virtually nothing whereas the others have paid a tiny amount?
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Originally posted by Resurrection Man View PostThat's not strictly true, Lat. There are many 'honourable' companies that pay a decent wodge of Corporation tax. For example, John Lewis and Halfords.
Very dispriting stores . (no offence to the doubtless fine people who work there).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 ahinton View PostAnd then what would happen? As I also said earlier, the danger in doing too much of this is that their values and incomes will deplete severely and that will affect almost everyone; the public will very soon get tired of that when it realises that it's being made to suffer as much as the targeted companies. ..
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