Irish Government May Close Apple's Biggest Tax Loophole
DavidGilbert99 writes "Ireland and its tax system came under some extreme scrutiny earlier this year when it was revealed that Apple funneled billions of dollars of revenue though three subsidiaries based in the country. Thanks to a loophole, none of these subsidiaries were tax-resident in Ireland, meaning they didn't even have to pay Ireland's relatively low 12.5% corporation tax rate. Worryingly for Apple, Ireland's finance minister may now shut this loophole. A measure within a new budget bill (PDF) would disallow Apple's status as a 'stateless' corporate entity for tax purposes. Apple will still be able to select a country like Bermuda as its tax residence, but it's a step in the right direction."
Saudi Aramco, the actual current most valuable company, doesn't pay shit because they basically own the Saudi government, which is a pretty sweet gig if you can get it.
(But no, let's keep pretending that a cellphone manufacturer is the most valuable company in the world because they have the highest market capitalization when you sort everybody on Google Finance.)
Actually, it's the awful commenters that are turning people away. For example, you only had to do a search in the Slashdot Search bar for 'Google Tax' to see half a dozen published stories about Google's tax exploits.