The accord disclosed Friday comes amid mounting criticism that Google
and other major U.S. companies have been scrimping on their tax bills
with a variety of accounting maneuvers that have rankled governments
around the world.
In the United Kingdom, for instance, Google has been facing accusations
that it hasn't been paying its fair share of taxes in a country that
represents its second largest market outside the U.S. Similar complaints
have been leveled against at Facebook, Amazon.com and Starbucks in the U.K.
Google has been minimizing its tax bill for years in the U.K. by keeping
its headquarters in Ireland, where rates are lower. The strategy has
helped Google boost its profits and its stock price and fatten its bank
accounts. Google and its recently formed parent company, Alphabet Inc.,
have about $73 billion in cash.
The tax-reduction tactics spurred a six-year inquiry into Google's
practices by an arm of the British government, Her Majesty's Revenue and
Customs, or HMRC.
Although Google insists it never broke any laws, the company says it
agreed with the HRMC on a change that reflects the "size and scope" of
its U.K. operations.
The accounting switch, retroactive to 2005, requires Google to base its
U.K. tax bill on ad revenue generated in the country instead of just
profit.
Google's U.K. ad revenue totaled $5.1 billion through the first nine
months of last year, that a 7 percent increase from the same time in
2014. That accounted for 10 percent of Google's revenue during the
period.
The agreement in Britain may foreshadow similar concessions in other overseas countries.
"The way multinational companies are taxed has been debated for many
years and the international tax system is changing as a result," Google
said in its statement.
Google has rankled U.S. lawmakers by keeping most of its cash overseas
so it won't be taxed, a practice that the company has given no
indication that it's ready to abandon. As of Sept. 30, Google kept 50
percent of its cash — $42 billion — in overseas accounts.
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