Google gets Australian
tax office demand to pay more, says to fight it
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[April 29, 2017]
By Harry Pearl
SYDNEY (Reuters) - Alphabet Inc's <GOOGL.O>
Google said it will challenge amended tax assessments issued by the
Australian Taxation Office (ATO), which is trying to claw back billions
of dollars from multinational corporations citing unpaid taxes.
The ATO has increased scrutiny over how much tax multinationals
operating in Australia pay. In December, it said it was pursuing seven
global businesses over A$2 billion ($1.50 billion) in unpaid tax.
While the ATO has not named the businesses it is pursuing, Google's
Australia unit said in accounts filed with the Australian Securities and
Investments Commission that it will “lodge an objection” to the tax
demand from the ATO.
“The company will continue to uphold its positions against any and all
such claims,” Google said in the financial statement released on Friday.
The search giant did not disclose how much the ATO has demanded it pay
in taxes.
Google and the ATO declined to comment on how much the company's amended
tax bill was.
Treasurer Scott Morrison said in April the country expected to claw back
A$2.9 billion from companies under the legislation.
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A Google search page is seen through a magnifying glass in this
photo illustration taken in Berlin on August 11, 2015. REUTERS/Pawel
Kopczynski/File Photo
Australia enacted the Multinational Anti-Avoidance Law in December 2015 and the
ATO has introduced new guidelines for foreign trading hubs.
Google Australia restructured its operations effective January 1 of last year to
comply with the legislation and its financial statement reveals an increase in
revenue and tax for the 2016 calendar year as a result.
Revenue surged to A$1.14 billion in 2016 from A$498 million in 2015, while total
income tax rose to A$16 million from A$2.8 million in 2015, the accounts show.
(Reporting by Harry Pearl; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)
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