Amazon, Apple, Facebook, Google, Microsoft, and Netflix have collectively dodged over $100 billion in global taxes so far this decade, according to an analysis released Monday by a U.K.-based tax transparency campaign group.
Later this week, the Fair Tax Mark plans to publish its full report on the tax conduct of the companies, entitled The Silicon Six and Their $100 Billion Global Tax Gap. The report’s key findings were detailed on the group’s website Monday.
“Our analysis of the long-run effective tax rate of the Silicon Valley Six over the decade to date has found that there is a significant difference between the cash taxes paid and both the headline rate of tax and, more significantly, the reported current tax provisions,” said the Fair Tax Mark chief executive Paul Monaghan. “We conclude that the corporation tax paid has been much lower than is commonly understood.”
The Fair Tax Mark studied each company’s annual filings in the United States—where the tech giants are incorporated—as well as some quarterly filings and accounts of subsidiaries over the period of 2010–2019. The group found that the collective global tax gap between the expected headline rates and the cash taxes paid was $155.3 billion. The gap between the current tax provisions and cash taxes was $100.2 billion.
“The report suggests that the bulk of the shortfall almost certainly arose outside the United States, given that the foreign current tax charge was just 8.4% of identified foreign profits,” the group explained. “Profits continue to be shifted to tax havens, especially Bermuda, Ireland, Luxembourg, and the Netherlands.”
The Fair Tax Mark determined that Amazon, whose CEO Jeff Bezos is the richest individual in the world, “stands out as the business with the poorest tax conduct” among the Silicon Six. The headline corporate tax rate in the U.S. was 35% for most of the years studied, but the group found that Amazon paid only $3.4 billion in income taxes—just 12.7% of profit—during the analyzed period.
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“The company is growing its market domination across the globe on the back of revenues that are largely untaxed, and can unfairly undercut local businesses that take a more responsible approach,” the group said, warning that “the situation is unlikely to reverse soon.”
The Guardian reported that Amazon pushed back against the findings, saying that the report’s “suggestions are wrong” and the company had “a 24% effective tax rate on profits from 2010–2018.”
Facebook ranked as the second-worst offender, having paid just 10.2% of its profit. Google, whose cash tax paid as a percentage of profit was 15.8%, came in third. Netflix, in the fourth spot, “proved to be the most difficult to rank,” and had the same cash tax percentage as Google.
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