April 26, 2024

British Lawmakers Accuse Multinationals of ‘Immorally’ Avoiding Taxes

George Osborne, the chancellor of the Exchequer, said he had earmarked an additional £77 million, or $124 million, for a campaign against “offshore evasion and avoidance by wealthy individuals and multinationals.” The push, the Treasury said in a statement, was expected to yield £2 billion in additional annual revenue.

The drive comes amid growing criticism in Britain and elsewhere in Europe of the fiscal policies of several American companies that pay little tax on the billions of pounds and euros in sales that they generate in the region.

“Global companies with huge operations in the U.K., generating significant amounts of income, are getting away with paying little or no corporation tax here,” said Margaret Hodge, chairwoman of the Public Accounts Committee of Parliament, in a report published Monday. “This is outrageous and an insult to British businesses and individuals who pay their fair share.”

The report focused on the tax practices of Starbucks, Amazon and Google, criticizing their policy of using lower-tax jurisdictions within Europe, like Ireland, Luxembourg and Switzerland, to record much of the revenue they generate in higher-tax countries like Britain, France and Germany. Companies like Google then transfer money they earn in Europe to Bermuda or other locations, thereby deferring or avoiding U.S. taxes as well.

At parliamentary hearings last month, executives of Google, Amazon and Starbucks maintained that their tax policies were perfectly legal, because European Union law lets companies based in one member state operate across the 27-country bloc.

But tax investigators in several countries, including France, are looking into whether the practice, which is also employed by European companies, is legal. Amazon recently disclosed that it had received a bill from the French fiscal authorities for $252 million in back taxes, adding that it was contesting the claim.

Starbucks said Monday that it was reviewing its British tax practices, after the company disclosed recently that it had paid no corporate tax in Britain last year, despite generating £398 million in sales.

“To maintain and further build public trust we need to do more,” Starbucks said in a statement. “The company has been in discussions with H.M.R.C. for some time” — a reference to Her Majesty’s Revenue Customs, the British tax collection agency — “and is also in talks with the Treasury.”

Google declined to comment Monday but has previously insisted that its tax practices comply with British law.

Amazon did not respond to repeated requests for comment.

The British parliamentary report stopped short of accusing the companies of tax fraud but said their explanations had been “unconvincing and, in some cases, evasive.”

“The inescapable conclusion is that multinationals are using structures and exploiting current tax legislation to move offshore profits that are clearly generated from economic activity in the U.K.,” Ms. Hodge said.

The committee also criticized Her Majesty’s Revenue Customs, saying it had been “too lenient.”

The government said it would hire experts to investigate “transfer pricing arrangements,” which multinational companies use to reduce their tax liability in higher-tax jurisdictions.

“The Government is clear that while most taxpayers are doing their bit to help us balance the books, it is unacceptable for a minority to avoid paying their fair share, sometimes by breaking the law,” Mr. Osborne said in a statement.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/04/business/global/british-lawmakers-accuse-mulitnationals-of-immorally-avoiding-taxes.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Today’s Economist: Simon Johnson: The End of the Euro Is Not About Austerity

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Simon Johnson is the Ronald A. Kurtz Professor of Entrepreneurship at the M.I.T. Sloan School of Management and co-author of “White House Burning: The Founding Fathers, Our National Debt, and Why It Matters to You.”

Most current policy discussion concerning the euro area is about austerity. Some people, particularly in German government circles, are pushing for tighter fiscal policies in troubled countries (i.e., higher taxes and lower government spending). Others, including in the new French government, are more inclined to push for a more expansive fiscal policy where possible and to resist fiscal contraction elsewhere.

Today’s Economist

Perspectives from expert contributors.

The recently concluded Group of 20 summit meeting is being interpreted as shifting the balance away from the “austerity now” group, at least to some extent. But both sides of this debate are missing the important issue. As a result, the euro area continues its slide toward deeper crisis and likely eventual disruptive breakup.

The underlying problem in the euro area is the exchange rate system itself – the fact that these European countries locked themselves into an initial exchange rate, i.e., the relative price of their currencies, and promised never to change that exchange rate. This amounted to a very big bet that their economies would converge in productivity – that the Greeks (and others in what we now call the “periphery”) would, in effect, become more like the Germans.

Alternatively, if the economies did not converge, the implicit presumption was that people would move; Greek workers would go to Germany and converge to German productivity levels by working in factories and offices there.

It’s hard to say which version of convergence was less realistic.

In fact, the opposite happened. The gap between German and Greek (and other peripheral country) productivity increased, rather than decreased, over the last decade. Germany, as a result, developed a large surplus on its current account – meaning that it exports more than it imports.

The other countries, including Greece, Spain, Portugal and Ireland, had large current account deficits; they were buying more from the world than they were selling. These deficits were financed by capital inflows (including some from Germany but also through and from other countries).

In theory, these capital inflows could have helped peripheral Europe invest, become more productive and “catch up” with Germany. In practice, the capital inflows, in the form of borrowing, created the pathologies that now roil European markets.

In Greece, successive governments overspent – financed by borrowing — as they sought to stay popular and win elections. Whether the new government installed on Wednesday after last weekend’s elections will make any progress is not clear.

Greece has already adopted a considerable degree of fiscal austerity. Now it needs to find its way to growth. Cutting the budget further won’t do that. “Structural reform” – a favorite phrase of the Group of 20 crowd – takes a very long time to be effective, particularly to the extent that it involves firing people in the short run. Throwing more “infrastructure” loans from Europe into the mix – for example, through the European Investment Bank – is unlikely to make much difference. Additional loans of this kind are likely to end up being wasted or stolen as more and more well-connected people prepare for the moment when the euro is replaced in Greece by some form of drachma.

In Spain and Ireland, capital inflows – through borrowing by prominent banks – pumped up the housing market. The bursting of that bubble has shrunk their real economies and brought down all the banks that gambled on loans to real estate developers and construction companies. Their problems have little to do with fiscal policy.

As conventionally measured, both Ireland and Spain had responsible fiscal policies during the boom, but they were building up big contingent liabilities, in the form of irresponsible banking practices.

When the banks blew up in Ireland, this created a fiscal calamity for the government, mostly because of lost tax revenue. It remains to be seen if Ireland can now find its way back to growth.

Spain still needs to recapitalize its banks – putting more equity in to replace what has been wiped out by losses — and, most important, it must also find a renewed path to private-sector growth. Investors are rightly doubtful that the current policies are pointed in this direction.

In Portugal and Italy, the problem is a longstanding lack of growth. As financial markets become skeptical of European sovereign debt, these countries need to show that they can begin to grow steadily – and bring down their debt relative to gross domestic product (something that has not happened for the last decade or so).

Fiscal austerity will not help, but fiscal expansion is also unlikely to do much – although presumably it could increase headline numbers for a quarter or two. The private sector needs to grow, preferably through exporting and through competing more effectively against imports.

Peripheral Europe could, in principle, experience an “internal devaluation,” in which nominal wages and prices fall and those countries become hyper-competitive relative to Germany and other trading partners. As a matter of practical economic outcomes, it is hard to imagine anything less likely.

Some politicians still hint they could produce the rabbit of “full European integration” from the proverbial magic hat. What does this imply about quasi-permanent transfers from Germany to Greece (and others)? Who pays to clean up the banks? What happens to all the government debt already outstanding? And does this mean that all Europe would now adopt German-style fiscal policy?

These schemes are moving even beyond the far-fetched notions that brought us the euro. “Europe only integrates in the face of crisis” is the last slogan of the euro  enthusiasts. Perhaps, but crises have a tendency to get out of control – particularly when they produce political backlash.

Most likely, the European Central Bank will provide some big additional “liquidity” loans to bring down government bond yields as we head into the summer. We should worry about how long any such feel-good policies last. Historically, August is a good month for a big European crisis.

As these difficult times approach, some people will admonish governments to stand up to markets. But when you are relying on capital markets to finance a large part of your continuing budget deficit and your debt rollover, this is empty bravado.

European governments should never have put their heads so far into the lion’s mouth with regard to public-sector borrowing. But the politicians, and many others, convinced themselves that they were all going to become more like Germany.

Peripheral Europe will never be like Germany. It’s time to face the implications of that fact.

Article source: http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/06/21/the-end-of-the-euro-is-not-about-austerity/?partner=rss&emc=rss

German Leaders Reiterate Opposition to Euro Bonds

FRANKFURT — German leaders on Sunday reiterated their opposition to issuing bonds backed by all euro zone countries, with Chancellor Angela Merkel saying that so-called euro bonds would be an option only in the distant future, while her finance minister said that common debt would make it easier for governments to avoid pursuing responsible fiscal policies.

“It will not be possible to solve the current crisis with euro bonds,” Mrs. Merkel told ZDF television.

The German finance minister, Wolfgang Schäuble, said it would take too long for countries in the euro zone to amend the treaty on monetary union, which would probably be required to allow the bonds. “We have to solve the crisis within the existing treaty,” he told the newspaper Welt am Sonntag.

Mr. Schäuble also spoke out against euro bonds during an appearance Sunday in Berlin, Reuters reported, saying that the threat of higher interest rates was necessary to impose budgetary discipline on the nations using the euro currency.

With nervous financial markets likely to face another turbulent week, the comments by Mrs. Merkel and Mr. Schäuble could reinforce perceptions that European leaders remain reluctant to act more forcefully to address the sovereign debt crisis. If so, the European Central Bank could find it more difficult to hold down yields on Italian and Spanish debt, and keep borrowing costs for those countries from reaching dangerous levels.

France and Germany have made it clear that they do not see euro bonds as the solution to rising borrowing costs for countries like Spain and Italy, Frank Engels, an analyst at Barclays Capital in Frankfurt, said in a note.

So far the central bank’s bond market intervention, which began two weeks ago, has kept Italian and Spanish yields below 5 percent, Mr. Engels wrote. In October, the European Financial Stability Facility, the European Union’s bailout fund, will be able to buy government bonds. But that may not be enough to keep yields within bounds, he said.

“Are these backstop facilities sustainable? We have our doubts, as the E.C.B.’s stamina is probably limited and the E.F.S.F.’s balance sheet is capped,” Mr. Engels wrote.

Mr. Schäuble told Die Welt that he did not think it would be necessary to increase the size of the bailout fund. Such comments may come as a particular disappointment to investors because Mr. Schäuble is regarded as one of the most pro-European members of the German cabinet, and among the most willing to agree to national sacrifice in the interest of saving the common currency.

He said that he personally would be willing to cede some control over fiscal policy to a European finance minister, as Jean-Claude Trichet, the president of the European Central Bank, has proposed. But Mr. Schäuble added, “We can only go as fast and as far as we can convince citizens and their representatives in Parliament.”

Separately, Der Spiegel magazine reported that the German finance ministry had calculated that euro bonds would cost Germany an additional 2.5 billion euros or $3.6 billion in interest payments in the first year of issuance, and as much as 10 times that sum each year after a decade. Germany’s borrowing costs are typically among the lowest in the world, but could rise if the nation’s reputation for fiscal prudence was diluted by closer association with countries like Italy.

A finance ministry spokesman said he could not confirm the Spiegel report, which the magazine said was based on estimates by unidentified ministry experts.

Opposition to euro bonds is strong within German political circles and among the country’s conservative economics establishment because of the perception that the country would wind up subsidizing its neighbors.

However, some economists argue that euro bonds would be cheaper even for Germany, because the volume of the bond market would rival the market for United States Treasuries and promote the euro as a reserve currency. That would increase demand for the bonds and lower interest rates.

There is some support for euro bonds in Germany. Leaders of the opposition Social Democrats and Green Party have spoken in favor of common European debt. In addition, the Frankfurt Allgemeine newspaper on Sunday quoted several members of Mrs. Merkel’s governing coalition in Parliament as saying that Germany should not rule out euro bonds forever.

While rejecting the bonds, Mr. Schäuble said that Germany would defend the euro “under all circumstances” and that the government categorically rejected suggestions that Greece should leave the euro zone, as some economists have proposed.

If Greece dropped out, he said, Europe would suffer “a dramatic loss of trust and influence.”

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/08/22/business/german-leaders-reiterate-opposition-to-euro-bonds.html?partner=rss&emc=rss