If you know it’s not avoidance, then why does your report use the term “avoidance” repeatedly?
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Replying to @DanNeidle @MForstater and
"Base erosion and profit shifting (BEPS) refers to tax avoidance strategies that exploit gaps and mismatches in tax rules to artificially shift profits to low or no-tax locations." - the OECD
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Replying to @taxwatch @DanNeidle and
We believe, for reasons which have been set out clearly in the report, and set out clearly again to you on twitter when you couldn't read them, that using the average profit margin approach gives a reasonable understanding of the profit that should arise in the UK.
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Replying to @taxwatch @DanNeidle and
We also state that these figures are not definitive, that they are estimated figures. Others are welcome to come up with their own methodology. You are welcome to come up with your own numbers.
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Replying to @taxwatch @DanNeidle and
But rather than do that, you just assert that most profit is declared in the US (facts clearly dispute that) and resort to name calling. SAD!
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Replying to @taxwatch @MForstater and
You keep saying that I said most profit is declared in the US. I didn't.
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Replying to @DanNeidle @taxwatch and
I'll ask you again: if a US company makes $100 of sales to a UK customer, how much of that do you think the UK should tax?
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Replying to @DanNeidle @MForstater and
The profit. Now what is the profit? That's a very good question. MNEs answer is that the profit in the UK is negligible. We think that understates the position - based on research of the companies own numbers.
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Replying to @taxwatch @DanNeidle and
Now you happen to disagree with our estimate of profit - which of course is your right. But rather than engage with the issue, you just assert we don't know what we are talking about. Which is a little silly.
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Replying to @taxwatch @DanNeidle and
No. This is not about someone happening to disagree on your estimate of profits. It is that the methodology you use to come up with UK 'tax avoidance' estimate fundamentally misunderstands or misrepresents the way the tax system works.pic.twitter.com/Az60FAah2h
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Companies don't pay tax based on *where their customers are* but on where they have taxable presence based on tax laws and treaties. Subsidiaries, branches, permanent establishments
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