The Business Times

Google's 'Dutch Sandwich' shielded 15.9b euros from tax

Published Wed, Jan 3, 2018 · 03:21 AM
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[LONDON] Alphabet's Google moved 15.9 billion euros (S$25.48 billion) to a Bermuda shell company in 2016, regulatory filings in the Netherlands show - saving the company billions of dollars in taxes that year.

Google uses two structures, known as a "Double Irish" and a "Dutch Sandwich", to shield the majority of its international profits from taxation. The setup involves shifting revenue from one Irish subsidiary to a Dutch company with no employees, and then on to a Bermuda mailbox owned by another Ireland-registered company.

The amount of money Google moved through this tax structure in 2016 was seven per cent higher than the year before, according to company filings with the Dutch Chamber of Commerce dated Dec 22 and which were made available online Tuesday. News of the filings was first reported by the Dutch newspaper Het Financieele Dagblad.

"We pay all of the taxes due and comply with the tax laws in every country we operate in around the world," a Google spokesman said in a statement. "We remain committed to helping grow the online ecosystem."

Google is under pressure from regulators and authorities around the world for not paying enough tax. Last year, the company escaped a 1.12 billion euro French tax bill after a court ruled its Irish subsidiary, which collects revenue for ads the company sells in France, had no permanent base in the country. The European Union has been exploring ways to make US technology companies, many of which use similar tax shelters, pay more.

The Irish government closed the tax loophole that permitted "Double Irish" tax arrangements in 2015. But companies already using the structure are allowed to continue employing it until the end of 2020.

According to US financial filings, Google's global effective tax rate in 2016 was 19.3 per cent, which it achieved in part by shifting the majority of its international profit to the Bermuda-based entity. Applying that tax rate, Google would have saved US$3.7 billion via the 2016 transfer.

Tax expert Robert Willens said a better way to calculate Google's savings would be to apply Ireland's 12.5 per cent tax rate to the amount of money shifted to Bermuda because the income would otherwise have been taxed there. Under that scenario, Google would have saved about US$2.4 billion in taxes.

Google held US$60.7 billion overseas at the end of 2016 on which it hadn't yet paid US income taxes or "foreign withholding taxes", the company said in a filing with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.

New Law

For years, US tax law has given American companies an incentive to keep their foreign earnings offshore by allowing them to defer US taxes until they return those profits to the US. But that changes this year; the US tax law passed last month will require companies to pay taxes on the overseas income they've stockpiled to date at one of two rates: 15.5 per cent for income held as cash or cash equivalents and eight per cent for less liquid assets.

Going forward, US companies that pay relatively low global effective tax rates - a sign that they're using tax havens - would pay a minimum US tax. That new tax, which begins at a rate of 10.5 per cent, wouldn't apply in cases where a company's global effective tax rate is 13.125 per cent or higher.

Google Ireland collects most of the company's international advertising revenue and then passes this money on to Dutch subsidiary Google Netherlands Holdings. A Google subsidiary in Singapore that collects most of the company's revenue in the Asia-Pacific region does the same.

The Dutch company then transfers this money on to Google Ireland Holdings Unlimited, which has the right to license the search giant's intellectual property outside the US. That company is based in Bermuda, which has no corporate income tax. The use of the two Irish entities is what gives the structure its "Double Irish" moniker and the use of the Netherlands subsidiary as a conduit between the two Irish companies is the "Dutch Sandwich".

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