To say nothing of EDF ... 85 per cent of which is owned by the French government.
And Southern Water is French.
To say nothing of EDF ... 85 per cent of which is owned by the French government.
And Southern Water is French.
Makes you wonder just how sovereign the British people are .
Surely a country as large and diverse as the EU has more potential than one the size of the UK?
only if you ignore what sovereignty means: having supreme authority to govern, to set and enforce laws. it doesnt matter who owns what, and to pretend thats the case is just a false argument. the example noted of Amazon and Apple abusing tax law is a fine example of how EU laws subvert our sovereignty as we have to follow the EU laws that allow them to shift their UK operations to other EU nations where tax suits them.
You've set out the advantages of pooling sovereignty in certain areas. None of us can pin down large multinational corps profits individually - we can only do it if we cooperate. Tax avoidance is essentially the abuse of state sovereignty. The EU is coordinating the response to this avoidance, as you would hope. EU laws will precisely stop them doing this, you've got it the wrong way round.
Go visit Greece and then go visit Germany. See if you still say 'a country'.Surely a country as large and diverse as the EU has more potential than one the size of the UK?
But you said 'a country'. Do you still stand by that?Greece won't get better by cutting them out will it!?
Greece is in a terrible position due to its cooking the books to cheat it's way into monetary union. It was expedient for German and French leaders to willfully ignore the elephant in the room and one fudge followed another. This has had disastrous implications for the poor people of Greece who were not the ones taking such awful decisions with their future. Bribed by politicians, they are now reaping this unpalatable harvest in the form of austerity and poverty. Germany, coincidentally, has made money on the deal.Greece won't get better by cutting them out will it!?
Worst company I've ever had the displeasure of dealing with.And Southern Water is French.
That makes no sense. How does sending billions of pounds to other countries make us better off?If we work to make poorer countries better off then we, in turn, will be better off.
Greece won't get better by cutting them out will it!?
Why don't the rich in this country just cut out the rest if us? That argument does not work.
If we work to make poorer countries better off then we, in turn, will be better off.
im not sure if this is disingenuous or ignorant. Amazon takes advantage of VAT rules to sell in to the UK from Luxembourg precisely because the EU rules allow them, and there are no laws being proposed to stop this, as is fundemental right for a EU based company to operate from where they like in the EU. Apple is a slightly different kettle of fish, but they are again using the rules provided by the EU to channel operations through the Ireland office, as many other companies do, for beneficial tax laws there. the only answer the EU has to this is possible action that some particular arrangments may be amount to state aid, but thats far from clear at this point (any company can and does take advantage, so not a specific company benefiting) and the EU has no plans to change the law on this type of avoidance, because again this goes against the principles of the EU.
they cannot meaningfully challenge these avoidance mechanisms as they have created them, they would have to force companies to be domiciled and tax in each individual country or pay tax in each country they make a sale, both of which would have the companies taking the EU to their own courts for breaking their own rules. like the migrant crisis, and the Euro, the EU makes its own mess and cant clean up after itself.
Under the directive, a multinational company will be obliged to file its country-by-country tax report to the tax authorities of the member state where its parent company is resident.
If its parent company resides outside of the EU, this will be done through the company’s EU subsidiaries. This “secondary reporting” will be mandatory from 2017.
Member states’ tax authorities will have to share this information automatically. The EU’s existing framework for information exchange between tax authorities will be built on to enable this, saving on implementation costs, the council said.
The directive will set deadlines of 12 months after the fiscal year for reports to be filed, and a further three months for automatic exchange.
Ireland prepares for Brexit fund influx
Irish central bank believes investment managers will relocate to Dublin if the UK leaves the EU
https://next.ft.com/content/43e2a1ae-e6de-11e5-bc31-138df2ae9ee6
This tricle will become a flood. I don't even want to think about how much money will flow out of the UK the closer we get to Brexit. So destructive and damaging.