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Showing Original Post only (View all)The seven craziest findings in the US investigation of Apple’s tax avoidance practices [View all]
1. Almost all of Apples foreign operations are run through an Irish company with no employees.
The company told investigators that it lost all records concerning why Apple Operations International was originally set up in 1980, and why all of Apple global sales go through it. You might have a few ideas why if you keep reading.
2. Apple pays 2%or lessin corporate income tax in Ireland.
The already low-tax country gives Apple special treatment with a negotiated 2% income tax rate. But thats just the top-line number: Between 2009 and 2011, one Irish subsidiary, Apple Sales International, earned $38 billion and paid $21 million in taxes, for an effective rate of .06%.
3. Apple Operations International, which provided 30% of Apples worldwide net profits from 2009 to 2011, doesnt pay taxes anywhere.
This move is devilishly brilliant: The US decides if it can tax you based on where you incorporate your company. Ireland decides if it can tax you based on the location of the people managing the company. So if you incorporate a subsidiary in Ireland, and manage it from the US, you dont (so far) have to pay taxes in either country. And thats exactly what Apple has done, not filing a tax return for AOI anywhere in the world in the last five years.
4. Apples US profits keep ending up in Ireland, too.
The report alleges more than just the avoidance of US taxes on foreign sales of Apples products. It also argues that Apple is effectively sending US profits to its Irish subsidiaries, too. How? Transfer pricing. Apple has set up a cost-sharing agreement with its Irish subsidiaries that gives them a disproportionate share of the profit from research and development that occurs in the United States. From 2009 to 2012, Apple allocated $4 billion in R&D costs to its US unit, which had $38.7 billion in profits, while its Irish subsidiary had $4.9 billion in R&D costsand $74 billion in profits.
5. Most of the $102 billion Apple is keeping overseas is in US banks.
Just as its Irish companies are managed by US employees, Apples Irish cash is mostly kept in US financial institutions, largely managed by Braeburn Capital, Apples financial engineering nexus in Nevada.
more
http://qz.com/86740/the-seven-craziest-findings-in-the-us-investigation-of-apples-tax-avoidance-practices/