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"But its British subsidiary, at first glance, appears to be doing less
well. Last week, it announced its first ever profits in Britain—of just
£1m ($1.54m)—in spite of having first set up in the country in 1998 and
now having 791 outlets. Analysts say that seems odd in a country that
has been crazy about caffeinated beverages since the 17th century and
now spends £1.45 billion in coffee shops each year, according to Mintel,
a market-research firm.
The main reason why S*******s has run persistent losses is not due to a
lack of interest in its coffee, but to minimise its tax bill. In fact,
S*******s’ operating profits are only slightly less in Britain than
America. In 2012, it made £70m on £414m of sales of frappuccinos,
espresso coffees and the like. However, it also made administrative
losses and royalty payments totalling £98m, enabling the division to
declare a £30m loss. It is via these payments that the firm has been
able to transfer its British profits to its Dutch subsidiary, which is
charged lower rates of tax."
No comment
--
Protect the Earth
It was not given to you by your parents
You hold it in trust for your children
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It could be any one of our favourite international companies.
--
Regards
Stephen
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> The main reason why S*******s has run persistent losses is not due to a
> lack of interest in its coffee, but to minimise its tax bill. In fact,
> S*******s’ operating profits are only slightly less in Britain than
> America. In 2012, it made £70m on £414m of sales of frappuccinos,
> espresso coffees and the like. However, it also made administrative
> losses and royalty payments totalling £98m, enabling the division to
> declare a £30m loss. It is via these payments that the firm has been
> able to transfer its British profits to its Dutch subsidiary, which is
> charged lower rates of tax."
>
> No comment
The companies are just doing whatever they can to make money (which is
what the shareholders want them to do), don't blame them. If you want to
blame someone blame the goverment for not introducing new laws to
prevent this type of thing.
It's also unfair of the media to pick out well-known brands that people
know, what about all the other multi-national companies that you haven't
heard of?
And don't forget in your example above the UK government will get far
more in VAT than the Dutch government will get in tax, so far from all
is not lost.
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On 17/02/2015 10:46, scott wrote:
> And don't forget in your example above the UK government will get far
> more in VAT than the Dutch government will get in tax,
Sorry, could you explain the significance of that?
--
Regards
Stephen
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>> And don't forget in your example above the UK government will get far
>> more in VAT than the Dutch government will get in tax,
>
> Sorry, could you explain the significance of that?
That the UK government don't get "nothing" from Starbucks because they
transferred all their profit abroad.
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On 17/02/2015 11:57, scott wrote:
>>> And don't forget in your example above the UK government will get far
>>> more in VAT than the Dutch government will get in tax,
>>
>> Sorry, could you explain the significance of that?
>
> That the UK government don't get "nothing" from Starbucks because they
> transferred all their profit abroad.
>
I would say that they do get nothing.
Star***ks only collect the VAT they get from their customers and pass it
on to HMRC. VAT has nothing to do with the company's profit.
--
Regards
Stephen
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Le 17/02/2015 12:57, scott a écrit :
>>> And don't forget in your example above the UK government will get far
>>> more in VAT than the Dutch government will get in tax,
>>
>> Sorry, could you explain the significance of that?
>
> That the UK government don't get "nothing" from Starbucks because they
> transferred all their profit abroad.
>
To state the obvious: the UK is taking the VAT, but does not take the
tax on the profit of the UK-corporation, as profit evaporates via
administrative (aka non-corporal, you cannot prove it did not
happened... no traces, but it's "legal") costs.
So instead of 20% of VAT (on full price of sell, let's say £20 out of
£100 you paid over the year for your coffee) and 28% on
big-company-profit** ( based on the remaining £80, minus the price of
water, the wages, the rent of every location, the paid energy, ... and
so on, from the £70m from £414m, remains something like £16 to be taxed,
about £5).
Now, with a bit of creativity, these £5 goes to some paradise and the
budget of UK takes what is missing from the tax-payers pocket.
**: smaller companies have a lower rate, in theory. But the evasion-game
is played so much by big companies that in fact the small companies are
more taxed.
--
Just because nobody complains does not mean all parachutes are perfect.
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>> That the UK government don't get "nothing" from Starbucks because they
>> transferred all their profit abroad.
>>
>
> I would say that they do get nothing.
> Star***ks only collect the VAT they get from their customers and pass it
> on to HMRC.
And if they made a profit in the UK and paid tax on it, they would have
to pass on a *little bit* more from their customers to HMRC. That was my
only point.
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On 17/02/2015 15:29, scott wrote:
>>> That the UK government don't get "nothing" from Starbucks because they
>>> transferred all their profit abroad.
>>>
>>
>> I would say that they do get nothing.
>> Star***ks only collect the VAT they get from their customers and pass it
>> on to HMRC.
>
> And if they made a profit in the UK and paid tax on it, they would have
> to pass on a *little bit* more from their customers to HMRC. That was my
> only point.
Okay. No deeper meaning then. :-)
--
Regards
Stephen
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>> And if they made a profit in the UK and paid tax on it, they would have
>> to pass on a *little bit* more from their customers to HMRC. That was my
>> only point.
>
> Okay. No deeper meaning then. :-)
No none at all :-)
But I guess a result of my point is that having the VAT collected in
another country (eg if you buy a product online from another EU country
and have it shipped here, if it's physical) is far worse for the
government. For example IIRC eBay was "based" in Luxembourg or something
so the VAT is only 15% on fees - the UK government must lose *a lot* of
money because of that.
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