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Apple says several billion dollars set aside for US taxes

“Ireland is being picked on and this is unacceptable”, the newspaper quoted him saying.

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About six months ago, Netflix told an investor that the company will likely pay higher worldwide tax rates than other large United States technology companies now pay.

I believe we’re the largest taxpayer there, we want to be a great citizen in the Irish community we’re working in.

The EU’s antitrust regulator Tuesday demanded that Ireland recoup roughly €13 billion in taxes from Apple, alleging that arrangements the government offered the company in 1991 and 2007 allowed it to pay around 1% to nearly zero tax on its European profits between 2003 and 2014.

“Member States can not give tax benefits to selected companies”, said Competition Commissioner Margrethe Vestager, “this is illegal under European Union state aid rules. Apple now has to repay the benefits”.

The result was that Apple paid an effective corporate tax rate that declined from 1% in 2003 to 0.005% in 2014 on the profits of Apple Sales International.

The EU opinion said Apple had been given €13bn of “prohibited” tax benefits.

These profits were not subject to tax in any country under provisions of Irish law that are no longer in force.

I think all discussions are fair discussions, and all reasonable people could agree or disagree, but that should be about future not retroactive taxes. Doing it this way doesn’t seem like the right approach to me.

Schumer said in an interview that he and Ryan had been discussing possibilities for a corporate tax overhaul for next year.

The EU executive this week retroactively scrapped a tax deal Apple had with Ireland, arguing the technology giant was effectively paying a tax rate of a fraction of one per cent on its profits.

Telling RTE that he “profoundly” disagreed with the decision, Noonan said: “The decision leaves me with no choice but to seek cabinet approval to appeal”. “There is no reason for it in fact or in law”.

Mr. Cook also said in the interview that he expects Ireland’s government will do “the right thing” and appeal the European Union claw back ruling.

“We are concerned about a unilateral approach… that threatens to undermine progress that we have made collaboratively with the Europeans to make the global taxation system fair”, Earnest told reporters, as quoted by BBC News.

USA tax law allows companies to retain earnings offshore with taxes put off until the money is repatriated, and the sum out there has climbed quickly over the past decade.

The European Commission’s ruling that Apple (NASDAQ: AAPL) should pay Ireland billions of dollars in back taxes was neither punitive nor unfair, one of the world’s best-known economists told CNBC on Thursday.

In Brussels, EU Competition Commissioner Margrethe Vestager vigorously defended the legality and arithmetic of the tax clawback order affecting Apple. “It’s normal to make Apple pay normal taxes”.

That figure constitutes more than 5% of Ireland’s gross domestic product, and if paid would allow the country to bring its debt down to about the mid-80s percent of gross domestic product (GDP) if the government uses it for that objective alone, he said.

The Commission says the “head offices” existed only on paper and could not have generated such profits.

“We paid $400 million in Ireland in 2014, another $400 million in the U.S., and many other taxes in other countries where we made a profit”, he said.

Lew said that while the Obama administration has not succeeded in getting tax reform through Congress, it has made progress on the issue and “there is a growing bipartisan consensus on how to deal with tax reform in a way that will enable us to reach overseas income”.

“Apple has systematically organized its Irish affairs in a way designed exclusively for tax avoidance”, said Matt Gardner of the Institute on Taxation and Economic Policy. “So it is quite obviously a European matter and a matter for EU state aid rules”.

Investigations are continuing into whether Luxembourg’s tax treatment of McDonald’s and Amazon also amounted to illegal state aid.

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Independent lawmakers in the ruling minority coalition said they needed to know more about the consequences before they could back the appeal.

Apple Inc. CEO Tim Cook