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Google defends HMRC tax deal

Google bosses defend tech giant's tax arrangements in hearing before MPs

GOOGLE’S European chief yesterday defended the tech giant’s tax arrangements and the controversial £130m tax deal it struck with HMRC as MPs accused two Google executives of being “out of touch with reality”.

Appearing before the influential Public Accounts Committee, Matt Brittin, head of Google’s European operation, and Google vice-president Tom Hutchinson insisted the Silicon Valley was paying the right amount of tax.

“I understand the anger and understand that people when they see reported that we are paying 3% tax would be angry. But we’re not. We’re paying 20% tax.”

Meg Hillier, chair of the cross-party committee, said Google’s £130m tax settlement with HMRC amounted to a ‘PR disaster’ for the firm and accused Brittin of leaving in a different world to ordinary tax payers when he declined to tell the committee how much he was paid.

“Out there, our constituents are very angry, they live in a different world clearly to the world you live in, if you can’t even tell us what you are paid,” said Hillier.
HMRC also mounted a strong defence of its settlement with Google, which chief executive Dame Lin Homer claimed was the largest Google had signed outside of the US.

Jim Harra, HMRC’s director general business tax, said the company had not been penalised because of the difficulty in proving ‘insufficient care”.

“I do understand the [public] anger, and I think HMRC and the government position is that the current penalty legislation does not work for large companies in the way it should,” Harra told the committee.

Harra was unable to respond to MPs’ questions as to how much the six-year Google tax audit had cost, but said it had been ‘very expensive and resource intensive’, largely because of the complexity in transfer pricing cases.

“We can challenge that and they can accept they need to change their position but it is very difficult to establish they have taken insufficient care,” he said.

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