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Apple Ordered To Pay £11bn In Irish Taxes

Apple Ordered To Pay £11bn In Irish Taxes

US technology giant Apple has been ordered to pay up to €13bn (£11bn) in back taxes to Ireland after a European probe.

Apple faces the record bill after the European Commission (EC) ruled that a special scheme to route profits through Ireland was illegal state aid.

The tech giant's tax arrangements enabled it to pay a tax rate of as little as 0.005% on its European profits in 2014, according to the probe.

That is just £50 in taxes on every £1m of profit.

:: The Wider Impact Of Taking A Bite From Apple

Ireland's finance minister Michael Noonan said he disagreed "profoundly" with the decision and would seek Cabinet approval for an appeal.

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The sum to be paid by Apple is 40 times bigger than any previous demand by the EC in such a case.

It could be reduced if other countries seek more taxes themselves from the US tech giant.

Commissioner Margrethe Vestager said: "Member states cannot give tax benefits to selected companies - this is illegal under EU state aid rules.

"The Commission's investigation concluded that Ireland granted illegal tax benefits to Apple, which enabled it to pay substantially less tax than other businesses over many years."

The probe found that Apple's profits were routed via Ireland to virtual head offices that had no employees, no premises and carried out no real activities.

These profits were not subject to tax in any country under provisions of Irish law that are no longer in force.

It meant that one subsidiary, Apple Sales International, paid a tax rate of just 1% in 2003, declining to 0.005% by 2014.

Apple chief executive Tim Cook said that the ruling would have a "profound and harmful effect" on investment and job creation in Europe and that the company paid all the taxes it owed in all the countries where it operated.

Chief financial officer Luca Maestri said the suggestion that Apple paid as little as £50 for every £1m in profit was "a completely made-up number".

The EC's tax crackdown on multinationals has prompted criticism in Washington, which accuses it of targeting US companies.

Online retailer Amazon and fast food giant McDonald's face probes over their tax arrangements in Luxembourg while coffee chain Starbucks has been ordered to pay up to €30m (£26m) in the Netherlands.