Facebook told The Guardian that “we take our tax obligations seriously and pay what we owe in every market we operate. In 2018 we paid $3.8bn in corporation tax globally and our effective tax rate over the last five years is more than 20%.”

“When multinational corporations abuse their tax responsibilities to society, they weaken the supports that our economies need to work well and create wealth.”
—Alex Cobham, Tax Justice Network

Apple ranked fifth. The Fair Tax Mark pointed out that although Apple “presents itself as ‘the world’s largest taxpayer’ and it certainly makes the largest tax contribution of the Silicon Six,” the company’s cash tax paid as a percentage of profit was still just 17.1%.

“Microsoft, by a slim margin, has the least aggressive approach to tax avoidance of the six,” the tax group concluded. Microsoft was co-founded by the world’s second-richest individual, Bill Gates, and “makes the second largest tax contribution of the Silicon Six,” according to the analysis. The company’s cash tax paid as a percentage of profit was 16.8%.

The Fair Tax Mark’s Monaghan said Monday that “the international tide is turning on the acceptability of corporate tax avoidance. The idea of countering the profit-shifting of Big Tech multinationals via the introduction of digital sales taxes has taken root in many countries.”

Monaghan noted that the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) “is now leading multilateral efforts to address the tax challenges from digitalization of the economy, and is looking to ensure that profitable multinationals pay tax wherever they have significant consumer-facing activities and generate their profits.”

Alex Cobham, chief executive of the London-based advocacy group Tax Justice Network, said that the group’s new report “demonstrates why we need a fundamental reprogramming of the world’s approach to tax, based on a unitary taxation.”

Under a unitary taxation system, the global profits of multinational corporations would be allocated across the countries where the companies actually conduct business, which advocates argue would effectively make tax havens useless.

“When multinational corporations abuse their tax responsibilities to society, they weaken the supports that our economies need to work well and create wealth,” said Cobham. “A unitary approach to tax means we can finally make sure multinational corporations contribute tax based on where they employ workers and do business, not where they rent mailboxes and hide ledgers.”

“By ensuring multinational corporations pay their fair share locally for the wealth created locally by people’s work—based on an agreed formula and supplemented by a minimum effective tax rate—governments can strengthen their economies to run smoothly and make a good life possible for everyone,” he added.

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