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Google to pay $140 million in back taxes in Britain

Google has agreed to pay £130m in back taxes after an “open audit” of its accounts by the tax authorities. Going forward, Google says that it will change its accounting system so that a higher proportion of sales are registered in Britain instead of Ireland, where the corporate tax rate is lower.

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Retail director Craig Hume, whose firm, Utopia, became one of the first tech companies in Scotland to pay the Living Wage, added: “Most UK business owners like me understand that we have an obligation to society in the way we conduct ourselves in business”. 60 million to the British government.

It comes after years of accusations that the firm’s complex tax arrangements meant it was failing to pay its fair share of tax in Britain.

Apple agreed to pay Italy 318 million euros to settle a tax dispute last month, and world leaders vowed in November to clamp down on schemes by multinationals to minimise tax.

HMRC has been investigating if Google avoided paying tax by allocating profits to Ireland, the home of its European operations.

Mrs Hillier said on Friday night: “The news that Google is paying 10 years’ back tax vindicates the Public Accounts Committee’s vigorous pursuit of worldwide companies that were running rings around tax officials”. He frames the deal as a broader shift in global tax rules set by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).

Richard Murphy, a chartered accountant and a political economist, who also heads the Far Tax Pledge campaign, said he was glad the documentary turned out to be about a group of people trying to the change the tax law, rather than about people trying to avoid tax. But under the new tax deal, the United Kingdom unit will also be paid an additional fee based on advertising revenue in the United Kingdom, boosting its taxable income.

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“The facts are we are an American company and that is where we pay the majority of our taxes, that is where we make the majority of our profits”. The Crickhowell locals are all interesting and strong characters and even though the producers deemed fit to manufacture some tension between them, they give up this exhausted trope pretty quickly as they realise they have proper show on their hands and re focus on the amiable Mr Prowse as he guides the group in their endeavour.

A poster with an image of Britain's Queen Elizabeth II incorporated into the Google's logo