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Oh man, the math behind this stuff must be fascinating -- designing a system to shuttle money around while minimizing latency and tax rates would be so much fun.

The economic/ethical implications of what Apple and others are doing according to this article are considerable and worrying, but all I can think of right now is some kind of sim-tax-evasion game.

What math and what system ?

It is simpler and easier the way Apple does it now. Money originates in each country that a sale is made some of which flows into the regions e.g. Americas or APAC. It would be much harder to be constantly moving money in and out of the US.

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Why do we as a society let them get away with this?

They are benefiting from all the social services regular citizens are (police, roads, water, public schools, etc.) without paying for them.

This is robbery. They are robbing America's future.

Most of those services are local services paid for through property taxes, which I would expect they pay just as much as any other land owner pays directly or renter pays indirectly in any areas where they own or rent.
They pay the taxes for income in the US. This is about foreign earnings.

If they stopped selling internationally, would you say it is no longer robbery?

They are benefiting from all the social services regular citizens are

Who is "they"? Apple employees? They're paying lots of taxes.

The society let them get away with this because the earnings are outside of the USA. If they do need to pay taxes for outside earnings then the company will just move to an other country.
Sounds great for the future of America
its despicable that companies like Apple reap enormous rewards and take advantage of American infrastructure and consumers, but don't have the decency to pay their fair share of taxes. I'm not a lover of taxes or the American government, but I think that successful corporations (and people) need to give back to the countries in which they operate.
For 2011, Apple paid $8.28 billion in income taxes, on $34.2 billion income, for an effective rate of 24.2%.

Similar for the other companies mentioned in the article. For instance, I believe Google paid around 20%.

Are those taxes that Apple paid because they were taxes on Apple as a corporate entity, or taxes paid by Apple onbehalf of its' employees who were being taxed on their income?

I don't believe that there is an accusation that the workers at Apple are avoiding tax, but that the company is avoiding tax.

It's corporate income taxes. Apple does not pay taxes on behalf of its employees.
Ah, my ignorance of US financials comes through then... so there is no US equivalent of the PAYE system or a withholding tax to ensure non-avoidance by employees?

When tzs refers to income tax, that traditionally means personal/employee income in the UK whereas corporation tax is the tax on profits levied to corporations.

Hence, tzs's statement above reads as if Apple did pay income tax on behalf of their employees, but makes no mention of corporation tax or an equivalent.

Too many similar terms used differently from one place to another. Now I understand the downvote.

Tax witholding for salaried employees is entirely normal and customary in the US, but the article is not about those individual taxes, and US taxpayers wouldn't ever describe the taxes as being paid "by" the employer on employees' behalf.
Careful. Employers shoulder half the burden of payroll taxes, which take the largest bite out of most employee paychecks.
A lot of times when people want to sway the conversation, they include the taxes that employees of Apple pay as well.
NY Times infographic here: http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2012/04/28/business/Doubl...

Sadly, this is the 'norm' for many, many corporations - including Google.

Your criticism may be better directed at those who write the laws, not those who follow them.

It's not only the norm, it a company's fiduciary responsibility to minimize tax liabilities. If these activities are against the intent of the law, a simple rule change should suffice.

Indeed, I personally believe that many corporations in the UK should pay more in tax - with less loopholes to escape from paying tax. But shouting at businesses isn't going to change anything, only shouting at politicians is going to to do that.

It seems though the only way to mobilise people to do this is to outrage them with the disparity between how they have to act and how companies are allowed to act.

As an aside, UK manufacturing is tiny, but from 2000 onwards , taken as a whole, has paid more in corporation tax than the entire huge banking system.

I certainly can't blame a company for taking advantage of existing loopholes and we should challenge our lawmakers to close said loopholes. However, I can question their ethics, stock market be damned.

This whole "it was my duty" mentality and shifting the blame... hmm, now where have I heard that before?

If the behavior is unethical, what exactly would be the correct and ethical way for these companies to calculate their taxes? If it's so cut and dried for you, maybe you can help us all out here.

You call it a loophole, suggesting that there is a design flaw in the law that is being exploited. What specific part of the law is flawed, and what was the drafting intent that has been misapplied in the law as it stands?

I'm really serious. It's disappointing to me that so many people are ready to assume unethical intentions, when the details and issues are far from clear to me (and likely not clear to them). Maybe there is a country that has done it correctly?

Accounting for business in multiple tax jurisdictions is really complex, and I can only assume that we had some really thoughtful people drafting the existing laws.

The amount of stupidity in this article is startling.

There are plenty of legitimate and common sense reasons for why Apple would keep much of their overseas earnings overseas. There are financial reasons e.g. minimizing wasteful forex conversions. There are legal reasons e.g posting collateral for court cases or tax disputes. There are logistic reasons e.g. having money on hand to make it easier to acquire companies or hire new stuff.

If Apple really wanted to avoid paying taxes then they are plenty of ways they could do this. But they DO pay taxes. Just not US taxes for non-US revenues.

I wonder why Ireland doesn't change their "if the Irish subsidiary is controlled by managers elsewhere, like the Caribbean, then the profits can skip across the world tax-free"[1] law. If so many huge corporations utilize the tax loophole, you would think it would be in their interest to tax that at least somewhat.

[1]: http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2012/04/28/business/Doubl...

Because as soon as they do that, there's less of a reason to spend a lot of money setting up an expensive corporate HQ in Ireland.
But is it actually that expensive to set up a corporation in Ireland?
A better headline would be "How insert multinational coprp avoids paying billions in taxes" I'm no apple fan, but this is the norm for most (all maybe?) big corps.