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When independent traders in a small Welsh town discovered the loopholes used by multinational giants to avoid paying UK tax, they didn’t just get mad.
Now local businesses in Crickhowell are turning the tables on the likes of Google and Starbucks by employing the same accountancy practices used by the world’s biggest companies, to move their entire town “offshore”.
originally posted by: stormcell
The insane thing is that these corporations will employ whole departments of accountants who look through every single rule of legislation to see what tax refunds they can apply for. These departments actually pay for themselves.
Crickhowell residents want to share their tax avoidance plan with other towns, in a bid to force the Treasury into legislation to crack down on loopholes which allowed the likes of Amazon to pay just £11.9m of tax last year on £5.3bn of UK internet sales.
Finally an initiative on behalf of local businesses, regarding the inequal taxation compared to multinationals.
Crickhowell residents want to share their tax avoidance plan with other towns, in a bid to force the Treasury into legislation to crack down on loopholes which allowed the likes of Amazon to pay just £11.9m of tax last year on £5.3bn of UK internet sales.
Jo Carthew, who runs Crickhowell’s Black Mountain Smokery, which sells local artisan produce, with her family, said: “We were shocked to discover that the revenue generated by hard-working employees in these British high street chains isn’t declared. We do want to pay our taxes because we all use local schools and hospitals but we want a change of law so everyone pays their fair share.”
From an outside perspective, humans need: Food, Water, Housing, Healthcare, Entertainment. We have industries for all of this. Then we have services: financial, social, governmental, legal, and its all of these, the buildings with thousands of people in them creating paperwork, but not actually doing anything to support the basic needs of people, humans.
With all the people creating endless amounts of paper waste, just imagine if instead they were doing something productive, to actually support their fellow humans.
Either way you now have less companies paying their taxes which is not good for the economy.
originally posted by: MrMasterMinder
a reply to: Tyrion79
So you seriously think the company suddenly had a board meeting and said 'hey guys what can we do protest about the big companies avoiding taxes?' and someone came up with the idea to copy them to get exposure?
Or did a company decide to just doge paying their taxes by copying what the bigger companies do?
Either way you now have less companies paying their taxes which is not good for the economy.
originally posted by: MichiganSwampBuck
I've noticed that it is common practice here in Michigan for businesses to locate just beyond the borders of the town or city where they do business to avoid the taxes there. It can get so crowded with businesses outside of town that the old main street business districts have to try to attract traffic and the new areas become the new main street.
It seems true that in order to attract new businesses you need a lower tax base which is something the Republicans are always saying. Perhaps some new zoning laws would help, but I sure didn't like the "trickle down" economics of the Regan era, they are more like trickle up in my opinion.