Corporations would be well advised to take note of the recent blockades outside Vodaphone stores by protesters wielding “tax dodgers” banners. As Vanessa Holder pointed out in the Financial Times recently, tax is becoming an important source of reputational risk. Whether in court, in the press or in the street, campaigners are beginning to draw attention to the issue of corporate taxation payments with as much zeal as the more immediately emotive problems of the environment or child labour.
As public deficits skyrocket all over the Western world and the public braces itself for a period of austerity, the comparison between welfare cuts and corporate tax avoidance is likely to be made increasingly vociferously. Organisations such as the Tax Justice Network, the Publish what you Pay Coalition, Global Financial Integrity and the European Network on Debt and Development are successfully raising the profile of this issue, and they are grabbing cash-strapped governments’ attention.
In the UK, in 2005-6, seven per cent of businesses in the Large Business Category (50 businesses out of 700) contributed two thirds of the total Corporation tax raised. Around 220 companies (one third) paid no Corporation Tax at all and a further 210 businesses paid less than £10 million each (Source: the National Audit Office). Similarly in France, only four of the CAC40 companies pay the full 33 per cent tax on corporate profits (Source: Commission des prelevements obligatoires).
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